A mechanistic investigation of ethylene oxide hydrolysis to ethanediol
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2007
The B3LYP/6-311 +G(d,p) description is employed to study the heterolytic ring opening mechanisms under microsolvation conditions for ethylene oxide in acidic, neutral, and alkaline environments. In acid and alkaline media, a concerted trans S(N)2 reaction is strongly favored as compared to the corresponding cis reaction. The importance of the nucleophile, water in acidic media and hydroxide ion in alkaline media, for lowering the activation enthalpy is emphasized and activation energies of similar to 80 and similar to 60 kJ mol(-1) are obtained under acid and alkaline conditions, respectively. Under neutral conditions, the trans SN2 mechanism becomes inaccessible because it invokes the formation of a transient HI and OH- pair across the 1,2-ethanediol molecule. Rather, epoxide ring opening is achieved by hydrolysis of a single water molecule. The latter mechanism displays significantly greater activation enthaply (205 kJ mol(-1)) than those in acid and alkaline environments. This is in agreement with experiment. Product distributions of simple olefins in neutral aqueous media, as well as the detrimental impact of acid/base conditions for the selectivity of epoxidation catalysts in aqueous media, are discussed.
EPOXIDATION
FRAMEWORK TI(IV)
EPOXIDES
TITANIUM SILICALITE
HYDROGEN-PEROXIDE
PROPYLENE
DENSITY
REACTIVE MOLECULES H2O
TI-SILICALITE
ZEOLITE