| Literature DB >> 31487079 |
Vera A Vil'1,2, Yana A Barsegyan1,2, Denis V Barsukov1, Alexander A Korlyukov3,4, Igor V Alabugin5, Alexander O Terent'ev1,2.
Abstract
Stereoelectronic interactions control reactivity of peroxycarbenium cations, the key intermediates in (per)oxidation chemistry. Computational analysis suggests that alcohol involvement as a third component in the carbonyl/peroxide reactions remained invisible due to the absence of sufficiently deep kinetic traps needed to prevent the escape of mixed alcohol/peroxide products to the more stable bisperoxides. Synthesis of β-alkoxy-β-peroxylactones, a new type of organic peroxides, was accomplished by interrupting a thermodynamically driven peroxidation cascade. The higher energy β-alkoxy-β-peroxylactones do not transform into the more stable bisperoxides due to the stereoelectronically imposed instability of a cyclic peroxycarbenium intermediate as a consequence of amplified inverse alpha-effect. The practical consequence of this fundamental finding is the first three-component cyclization/condensation of β-ketoesters, H2 O2 , and alcohols that provides β-alkoxy-β-peroxylactones in 15-80 % yields.Entities:
Keywords: anomeric effects; carbonyl compounds; peroxides; peroxycarbenium ion; stereoelectronic effects
Year: 2019 PMID: 31487079 DOI: 10.1002/chem.201903752
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemistry ISSN: 0947-6539 Impact factor: 5.236