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Journal ArticleDOI

The Cobalt-Salt-Catalyzed Autoxidation of Benzaldehyde

TLDR
In this paper, the authors studied the autoxidation of benzaldehyde in glacial acetic acid catalyzed by cobalt salts and determined the relative contributions of these reactions to the decay of the peracid concentration.
Abstract
The autoxidation of benzaldehyde in glacial acetic acid catalyzed by cobalt salts has been studied by kinetic and analytical methods. In the initial phase of the reaction the oxygen reacts quantitatively with the aldehyde to form perbenzoic acid, but as the reaction proceeds the peracid concentration falls below that of the oxygen absorbed due to ( a ) the catalyzed decomposition of the perbenzoic acid, and ( b ) the reaction of the perbenzoic acid with benzaldehyde to give benzoic acid. The relative contributions of these reactions to the decay of the peracid concentration has been determined. The initiating reaction has been shown to be the interaction of the cobaltic ion with the aldehyde according to Co 3+ + C 6 H 5 CHO → Co 2+ + C 6 H 5 CO·. (1) Direct measurements of the rate of this reaction agreed with the value of the rate of initiation determined by an analysis of the kinetics of the rate of the inhibited oxidation. The overall rate of oxidation may be fully explained by the following kinetic scheme: C 6 H 5 CO· + O 2 → C 6 H 5 COOO· (2) C 6 H 5 COOO· + C 6 H 5 CHO → C 6 H 5 COOOH + C 6 H 5 CO· } (propagation), (3) 2C 6 H 5 COOO → inert products (termination). (4) The chain length and the activation energies of the elementary reactions have been determined. The oxidation was inhibited by hydroquinone, diphenylamine and β -napthol and retarded by benzoquinone. The rate of the retarded oxidations satisfied the relation rate of oxidation = k9 / k" + [benzoquinone]· By considering the reaction which is responsible for the retardation, C 6 H 5 COOO· + C 6 H 4 O 2 → inert products, (5) in conjunction with the normal termination reaction (4) it is shown that at retarder con­centrations below 10 -3 M radical-radical termination is the more important reaction, but at 10 -1 M retarder concentration radical-radical interaction contributes only 1% to the termination process.

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Book ChapterDOI

Metal-Catalyzed Oxidations of Organic Compounds in the Liquid Phase: A Mechanistic Approach

TL;DR: In this article, the subject of metal-catalyzed oxidations of organic compounds in the liquid phase, largely within a mechanistic framework, has been discussed and a better understanding of the catalytic action of metal complexes is essential from the view of increasing selectivity and efficiency.
OtherDOI

Lipid Oxidation: Theoretical Aspects

TL;DR: This chapter reviews initiation processes with a focus on differentiating rates, mechanisms, and specificity of radical formation; and it presents evidence for multiple propagation mechanisms that lead to different product mixes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Metals and lipid oxidation. Contemporary issues.

TL;DR: Increased consideration must be given to five contemporary issues regarding metal catalysis of lipid oxidation: hypervalent non-heme iron or iron-oxygen complexes, heme catalysis mechanism(s), compartmentalization of reactions and lipid phase reactions of metals, effects of metals on product mixes, and factors affecting the mode of metal catalytic action.
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