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Oxidation of secondary alcohols to ketones

About: Oxidation of secondary alcohols to ketones is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 61 publications have been published within this topic receiving 1887 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A tandem protocol to access tertiary alcohols has been developed which combines the organocatalytic oxidation of secondary alcohols to ketones followed by their chemoselective addition by several RLi reagents.

15 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that primary and secondary amines irreversibly inactivate the Mn complex in the S1 state by a reductive mechanism, leading to the liberation of Mn(II) ions and a concomitant loss of O2-evolution activity.

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a rapid 20min to 2h and selective oxidation of secondary alcohols to ketones can be achieved using trichloroisocyanuric acid and pyridine at room temperature in ethyl acetate.

11 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe a ruthenium-catalyzed oxidation of secondary alcohols in the presence of 1-dodecene, and the results of several attempted oxidations of 1-(2naphthyl)ethanol (3a) to 2'-acetonaphthone (4a) under several conditions are listed in Table 1.
Abstract: The oxidation of alcohols to carbonyl compounds has been recognized as a fundamental organic transformation in synthetic organic chemistry. Besides conventional routes, many elegant transition metal-catalyzed methods assisted by co-oxidants are known and used for such transformations. As part of our ongoing studies on ruthenium catalysis, it has recently been found that carbonyl compounds are coupled with alcohols in several routes. The coupling of ketones 1 with primary alcohols 2 preferentially afforded coupled ketones 4 (Scheme 1, route a) or coupled secondary alcohols 5 (Scheme 1, route b) according to the molar ratio of 2 to 1. In addition, secondary alcohols 3 was also found to be coupled with 2 to give 5 (Scheme 1, route c). Among them, in connection with this report, the addition of sacrificial hydrogen acceptor (1-dodecene) in the case shown in route c of Scheme 1 was essential for the dramatic enhancement of reaction rate. This could be due to the acceleration of initial oxidations of both starting alcohols by transfer hydrogenation from alcohols to 1-dodecene. Under these circumstances, this report describes a rutheniumcatalyzed oxidation of secondary alcohols in the presence of 1-dodecene. The results of several attempted oxidations of 1-(2naphthyl)ethanol (3a) to 2'-acetonaphthone (4a) under several conditions are listed in Table 1. Treatment of 3a in the presence of a catalytic amount of RuCl2(PPh3)3 (2 mol%) along with KOH in dioxane at 100 C afforded 4a in 15% isolated yield with 35% conversion of 3a (run 1). However, when 1-dodecene was further added, the oxidation rate was remarkably enhanced and 4a was formed in 77% yield with 85% conversion of 3a (run 2). As has been noted in our recent report, the fate of 1-dodecene seems to be partially converted into dodecane by accepting hydrogen. It is known that the carbon-carbon double bond of α,βunsaturated carbonyl compound works as a hydrogen acceptor for the ruthenium-catalyzed oxidation of secondary alcohols to ketones. Lower reaction temperature (80 C) resulted in a slightly lower yield of 4a (run 3). Performing the reaction under K2CO3/toluene in place of KOH/dioxane produced 4a in only 41% yield with incomplete conversion (43%) (run 4). Similar treatment of 3a in the presence of RhCl(PPh3)3 under the employed conditions resulted in lower yield of 4a (60%) when compared to the use of RuCl2(PPh3)3 catalyst (run 5). Given the controlled reaction conditions, various secondary alcohols 3 were employed to investigate the reaction scope. The results are summarized in Table 2. Aryl(methyl) carbinols (3b-3e) were oxidized into the corresponding ketones (4b-4e) in the range of 21-79% yields. The ketone yield was considerably affected by the electronic nature of the substituent on the aromatic ring of aryl(methyl) cabinols. With 3c and 3d having electron-donating substituent on the Scheme 1 Table 1. Oxidation of 3a into 4a under several conditionsa

9 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The trans-dioxo ruthenium (VI) complex catalyzes the oxidation of secondary alcohols to ketones by N-methylmorpholine-Noxide (NMO) as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Thetrans-dioxo ruthenium (VI) complex, [P(C6H5)3C6H5CH2]+[Ru(O)2OAcCl2] or tetrapropylammonium perruthenate catalyzes the oxidation of secondary alcohols to ketones byN-methylmorpholine-N-oxide (NMO). Kinetic studies showed the formation of a complex between catalyst and substrate (alcohol) as the first step in the mechanism.

5 citations

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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20201
20191
20173
20152
20142
20131