4.7 Article

Light-mediated aerobic oxidation of C(sp3)-H bonds by a Ce(iv) hexachloride complex

Journal

ORGANIC CHEMISTRY FRONTIERS
Volume 9, Issue 10, Pages 2612-2620

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2qo00362g

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Vagelos Institute for Energy Science and Technology (VIEST)
  2. Center for Actinide Science and Technology (CAST), an Energy Frontier Research Center (EFRC) - U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences (BES) [DE-SC0016568]
  3. University of Pennsylvania
  4. NSF Major Research Instrumentation Program [NSF CHE-1827457]
  5. NIH [3R01GM118510-03S1, 3R01GM087605-06S1]
  6. Vagelos Institute for Energy Science and Technology
  7. US NSF [CHE-1902509]
  8. U.S. National Science Foundation [CHE-1955724]

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This article describes a photochemical C(sp(3))-H oxygenation reaction of alkane and arene substrates catalyzed by [NEt4](2)[(CeCl6)-Cl-IV] under mild conditions (1 atm, 25 degrees C). The hydrocarbons are oxidized stepwise to alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, and carboxylic acids. The approach is not only applicable to alkane and arene substrates, but also capable of directly activating light alkanes such as methane and ethane.
A photochemical C(sp(3))-H oxygenation of alkane and arene substrates catalyzed by [NEt4](2)[(CeCl6)-Cl-IV] under mild conditions (1 atm, 25 degrees C) is described. Time-course studies reveal that the hydrocarbons are oxidized in a stepwise fashion to afford alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, and carboxylic acids. The catalyst resting state, [(CeCl6)-Cl-IV](2-), is observed by UV-visible spectroscopy. On/off light-switching experiments, quantum yield measurements, and the absence of a kinetic isotope effect on parallel C-H/C-D functionalization suggest that ligand-to-metal charge transfer of [NEt4](2)[(CeCl6)-Cl-IV] to generate Cl is the turnover-limiting step. The involvement of a highly reducing excited-state [NEt4](3)[(CeCl6)-Cl-III]* species as well as photo-excited aldehyde, under black light irradiation appears to facilitate the conversion of primary alcohols and aldehydes to carboxylic acids. Remarkably, this approach is found to be capable of direct activation of light alkanes, including methane and ethane.

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