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Formation, Reactivity, and Catalytic Behavior of a Keggin Polyoxometalate/Bipyridine Hybrid in the Epoxidation of Cyclooctene with H 2 O 2 .

Gabriel HidalgoGabriella Barozzino-ConsiglioKoen RobeynsMichel DevillersEric M Gaigneaux
Published in: Inorganic chemistry (2023)
The present study further explores the behavior of polyoxometalate-based hybrid compounds as catalysts for liquid-phase cyclooctene epoxidation with H 2 O 2 . Precisely, it unveils the nature of the relevant active species derived from the hybrid based on Keggin polyoxometalate (POM) and bipyridines (bpy) of formula (2,2'-Hbpy) 3 [PW 12 O 40 ] ( 1 ). Whereas (i) it is generally accepted that the catalytic oxidation of organic substrates by H 2 O 2 involving Keggin HPAs proceeds via an oxygen transfer route from a peroxo intermediate and (ii) the catalytically active peroxo species is commonly postulated to be the polyperoxotungstate {PO 4 [W(O)(O 2 ) 2 ] 4 } 3- complex (PW 4 ), we show that the studied epoxidation reaction seems to be more sophisticated than commonly reported. During the catalytic epoxidation, 1 underwent a partial transformation into two oxidized species, 2 and 3 . Compound 3 corresponding to 2,2'-bipyridinium oxodiperoxotungstate of formula [WO(O 2 ) 2 (2,2'-bpy)] was shown to be the main species responsible for the selective epoxidation of cyclooctene since 2 (in which the POM is associated with a protonated mono-N-oxide derivative of 2,2'-bpy of formula (2,2'-HbpyO) 3 [PW 12 O 40 ]) exhibited no activity. The structures of 1 , 2 , and 3 were solved by single-crystal X-ray diffraction and were independently synthesized. The speciation of 1 was monitored under catalytic conditions by 1 H and 1 H DOSY NMR spectroscopies, where the formation in situ of 2 and 3 was revealed. A reaction mechanism is proposed that highlights the pivotal, yet often underestimated, role of H 2 O 2 in the reached catalytic performances. The active species responsible for the oxygen transfer to cyclooctene is a hydroperoxide intermediate species that is formed by the interaction between the anionic structure of the catalyst and H 2 O 2 . The latter operates as a "conservative agent" whose presence in the catalytic system is required to prevent the catalysts from deactivating irreversibly.
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