A homogeneous catalyst for selective O-2 oxidation at ambient temperature.Diversity-based discovery and mechanistic investigation of thioether-oxidation by the Au(III)Cl2NO3(thioether)/O-2 system
E. Boring et al., A homogeneous catalyst for selective O-2 oxidation at ambient temperature.Diversity-based discovery and mechanistic investigation of thioether-oxidation by the Au(III)Cl2NO3(thioether)/O-2 system, J AM CHEM S, 123(8), 2001, pp. 1625-1635
A library of inorganic complexes with reversible redox chemistry and/or the
ability to catalyze homogeneous oxidations by peroxides, including but not
limited to combinations of polyoxometalate anions and redox-active cations
, was constructed. Evaluation of library members for the ability to catalyz
e aerobic sulfoxidation (O-2 oxidation;of the thioether, 2-chloroethyl ethy
l sulfide, GEES) led to the discovery that a combination of HAuCl4 and AgNO
3 forms a catalyst that is orders of magnitude faster than the previously m
ost reactive such catalysts (Ru(II) and (IV) complexes) and one effective a
t ambient temperature and 1 atm air or O-2. If no O-2 but high concentratio
ns of thioether are present, the catalyst is inactivated by an irreversible
formation of colloidal Au(0). However, this inactivation is minimal in the
presence of O-2; The stoichiometry is R2S + 1/2 O-2 --> R2S(O), a 100% ato
m efficient oxygenation, and not oxidative dehydrogenation. However, isotop
e labeling studies with (H2O)-O-18 indicate that H2O and not O-2 or H2O2 is
the source of oxygen in the sulfoxide product; H2O is consumed and subsequ
ently regenerated in the mechanism. The rate: law evaluated for every speci
es present in solution; including the products, and other kinetics data, in
dicate that the dominant active catalyst is Au(III)Cl2NO3(thioether) (1); t
he rate-limiting step involves:oxidation of the substrate thioether (CEES)
by Au(III); reoxidation of the resulting Au(I) to Au(LIT) by O-2 is a fast
subsequent step. The rate of sulfoxidation as Cl is replaced by Br, the sol
vent kinetic isotope effect (k(H2O)/k(D2O) = 1.0), and multiparameter fitti
ng of the kinetic data establish that the mechanism of the rate-limiting st
ep involves a bimolecular attack of GEES on a Au(III)-bound halide and it d
oes not involve H2O. The reaction is mildly inhibited by H2O and the CEESO
product because these molecules compete with those needed for turnover (Cl-
, NO3-) as ligands for the active Au(III). Kinetic studies using DMSO as a
model for CEESO enabled inhibition by CEESO to be assessed.