Bifunctional Porphyrin Catalysts for the Synthesis of Cyclic Carbonates from Epoxides and CO2: Structural Optimization and Mechanistic Study

We prepared bifunctional MgII porphyrin catalysts 1 for the solvent-free synthesis of cyclic carbonates from epoxides and CO2. The activities of 1d, 1h, and 1i, which have Br–, Cl–, and I– counteranions, respectively, increased in the order 1i < 1h < 1d. Catalysts 1d and 1j–m, which bear four...

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Published inJournal of the American Chemical Society Vol. 136; no. 43; pp. 15270 - 15279
Main Authors Ema, Tadashi, Miyazaki, Yuki, Shimonishi, Junta, Maeda, Chihiro, Hasegawa, Jun-ya
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published WASHINGTON American Chemical Society 29.10.2014
Amer Chemical Soc
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Summary:We prepared bifunctional MgII porphyrin catalysts 1 for the solvent-free synthesis of cyclic carbonates from epoxides and CO2. The activities of 1d, 1h, and 1i, which have Br–, Cl–, and I– counteranions, respectively, increased in the order 1i < 1h < 1d. Catalysts 1d and 1j–m, which bear four tetraalkylammonium bromide groups with different alkyl chain lengths, showed comparable but slightly different activities. Based on the excellent catalyst 1d, we synthesized MgII porphyrin 1o with eight tetraalkylammonium bromide groups, which showed even higher catalytic activity (turnover number, 138,000; turnover frequency, 19,000 h–1). The catalytic mechanism was studied by using 1d. The yields were nearly constant at initial CO2 pressures in the 1–6 MPa range, suggesting that CO2 was not involved in the rate-determining step in this pressure range. No reaction proceeded in supercritical CO2, probably because the epoxide (into which the catalyst dissolved) dissolved in and was diluted by the supercritical CO2. Experiments with 18O-labeled CO2 and D-labeled epoxide suggested that the catalytic cycle involved initial nucleophilic attack of Br– on the less hindered side of the epoxide to generate an oxyanion, which underwent CO2 insertion to afford a CO2 adduct; subsequent intramolecular ring closure formed the cyclic carbonate and regenerated the catalyst. Density functional theory calculations gave results consistent with the experimental results, revealing that the quaternary ammonium cation underwent conformational changes that stabilized various anionic species generated during the catalytic cycle. The high activity of 1d and 1o was due to the cooperative action of the MgII and Br– and a conformational change (induced-fit) of the quaternary ammonium cation.
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ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/ja507665a