| Literature DB >> 30206248 |
Sourav Biswas1,2, Harshul S Khanna3, Quddus A Nizami4, Donald R Caldwell1, Katherine T Cavanaugh1, Amy R Howell1, Sumathy Raman4, Steven L Suib5,6, Partha Nandi7.
Abstract
Herein, we report a one-step peroxide mediated heterogeneous catalytic oxidation of amides to imides utilizing a series of manganese oxides. Among them, Cs/Mn2O3 was found to be the most active catalyst for the selective partial oxidation of N-benzylbenzamide to diphenyl imide. We have been able to apply an optimized oxidation method to other aromatic substrates. The feasibility of using air as an oxidant, the heterogeneous nature, inexpensive catalytic materials, respectable turnover numbers, and chemoselectivity to imides make this methodology an attractive choice for functional group transformations of amides to imides.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30206248 PMCID: PMC6134084 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-31729-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Optimization of oxidation of N-benzylbenzamide.
| Entry | Oxidant | Additives | Conv. (%)b | Selectivity (%)b | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diphenyl Imide | N-benzamide | ||||
| 1 | Air | none | 0 | nd | nd |
| 2 | Oxygen | none | 0 | nd | nd |
| 3 | H2O2 | none | 0 | nd | nd |
| 4 | TBHP/water | none | 5 | 50 | 22 |
| 5 | TBHP/nonane | none | 10 | 15 | 80 |
| 6c | TBHP/nonane | NHPId | 25 | 90 | 10 |
| 7e | TBHP/nonane | NHPI | 90 (85) | 95 | 5 |
| 8 | THBP/nonane | Air | 10 | 15 | 80 |
| 9 | TBHP/nonane | Argon | 0 | nd | nd |
| 10e | None | NHPI | 5 | 80 | 10 |
| 11 | None | NHPI | 0 | nd | nd |
| 12f | TBHP/nonane | NHPI | 0 | nd | nd |
aReaction conditions: N-benzyl benzamide (100 mg, 0.5 mmol, 1.0 equiv), meso Cs/Mn2O3 (50 mg), acetonitrile (5 mL, 95 mmol, 190 equiv), 80 °C, TBHP (5 mmol, 0.45 g, 10 equiv), 22 h. bConversions and selectivities were determined by GC-MS based on concentration of N-benzyl benzamide using m-xylene as internal standard. Isolated yields are in parentheses. cTBHP addition rate of 0.8 µL min−1. d10 mol% NHPI. eMolecular sieves as additives (200 mg) and air. fNo catalyst. nd = not detected by GC-MS.
Catalyst Scope for oxidation of N-benzylbenzamide.
| Entry | Catalyst | Conv. (%)b | Selectivity (%)b | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diphenyl Imide | ||||
| 1c | K-OMS-2 | 45 | 60 | 40 |
| 2c | Meso Mn2O3 | 50 | 60 | 40 |
| 3 | Meso Cs/Mn2O3 | 77 | 67 | 33 |
| 4 | Cs-K-OMS-2 (SF) | 60 | 15 | 85 |
| 5 | AMO (UCT-1) | 60 | 60 | 40 |
| 6 | C-MnO2 | 15 | 50 | 50 |
| 7 | None | 0 | nd | nd |
aReaction conditions: N-benzylbenzamide (100 mg, 0.5 mmol, 1.0 equiv), catalyst (50 mg), acetonitrile (5 mL, 95 mmol, 190 equiv), TBHP (5 mmol, 0.45 g, 10 equiv) with addition rate of 0.8 µL min−1, NHPI (8 mg, 0.05 mmol, 0.1 equiv), molecular sieves (200 mg), 80 °C, 22 h. bConversions and selectivities were determined by GC-MS based on concentration of N-benzyl benzamide using m-xylene as internal standard. cNo NHPI was used. C-MnO2 denotes commercial manganese oxide. nd = not detected by GC-MS.
Oxidation of amides to imides by manganese oxides.
| Entry | Substrate | Conv. (%)b | Selectivity (%)b (Imide) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1c |
| 90 (85) | 95 |
| 2 |
| 90 (79) | 98 |
| 3 |
| 0 | 0 |
| 4 |
| 92 | 94 |
| 5 |
| 90 | 94 |
| 6c |
| >99 (61) | 100 |
| 7 |
| 85 | 92 |
| 8 |
| 0 | 0 |
| 9 |
| 0 | 0 |
| 10 |
| 0 | 0 |
aReaction conditions: Amide (0.5 mmol, 1.0 equiv), AMO (50 mg), acetonitrile (5 mL, 95 mmol, 190 equiv), TBHP (5 mmol, 0.45 g, 10 equiv) with addition rate of 0.8 µL min−1, NHPI (8 mg, 0.05 mmol, 0.1 equiv), molecular sieves (200 mg), 80 °C, 22 h. No NHPI was used for isolating the imides. bConversions and selectivities were determined by GC-MS based on concentration of amide and selectivity toward the imide product. cUsed Cs/Mn2O3 instead of AMO. All runs were repeated at least twice, with a standard deviation of below 10%. Isolated Yields are in Parentheses.
Figure 1Hammett plot of competitive oxidation of para substituted N-benzylbenzamide. Reaction conditions are as described in Table 3 for 8 h. A linear relationship between ln(kx/kH) and Brown–Okamoto constant (σp+) for para substituted benzylamines with slope (ρ) of 0.355 was obtained, which indicates the formation of a negatively charged transition state.
Figure 2The C-H abstractions vs N-H abstraction pathways.