Published January 1, 2013 | Version v1
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Mechanism of MTO-Catalyzed Deoxydehydration of Diols to Alkenes Using Sacrificial Alcohols

Description

Catalytic deoxydehydration (DODH) of vicinal diols is carried out employing methyltrioxorhenium (MTO) as the catalyst and a sacrificial alcohol as the reducing agent. The reaction kinetics feature an induction period when MTO is added last and show zero-order in [diol] and half-order dependence on [catalyst]. The rate-determining step involves reaction with alcohol, as evidenced by a KIE of 1.4 and a large negative entropy of activation (Delta S-double dagger = -154 +/- 33 J mol(-1) K-1). The active form of the catalyst is methyldioxorhenium(V) (MDO), which is formed by reduction of MTO by alcohol or via a novel C-C bond cleavage of an MTO-diolate complex. The majority of the MDO-diolate complex is present in dinuclear form, giving rise to the [Re](1/2) dependence. The MDO-diolate complex undergoes further reduction by alcohol in the rate-determining step to give rise to a putative rhenium(III) diolate. The latter is the active species in DODH extruding stereoselectively trans-stilbene from (R,R)-(+)-hydrobenzoin to regenerate MDO and complete the catalytic cycle.

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