Abstract
The utilization of CO2 as a protective agent to adjust and control the reactions for the highly selective synthesis of fine chemicals was rarely studied. Herein, a strategy of CO2 as a temporary protective agent was disclosed and well applied to the KI-catalyzed hydration of epoxides to synthesized diols with high yields (87.8–98.9%) and selectivities (89.5–99.1%) at a low H2O/epoxide ratio of 1.5:1. Isotope labeling experiments using isotope-labeled water (H218O) confirmed that the strategy remained direct hydration of epoxides. Mechanistic experiments and density functional theory (DFT) calculations implied that CO2 as a temporary protective agent, protected the oxygen-negative intermediates formed from the ring opening of epoxides to generate carbonate anion, thereby safeguarding the hydration of epoxides against potential condensation reactions and simultaneously activate H2O for nucleophilic substitution reaction. Finally, CO2 could be automatically released later through the decarboxylation process. The strategy with excellent functional group tolerance, the viability from the gram-scale reaction, and the flue gas reaction will open up new avenues for applications of CO2 in the hydration of epoxides and inspire novel synthetic design by utilizing CO2 as a temporary protective agent.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 133308 |
| Journal | Fuel |
| Volume | 381 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 1 Feb 2025 |
Keywords
- Carbon dioxide
- Diols
- Epoxides
- Hydration
- Temporary protective agent