Selective
oxidation reactions have extraordinary value in organic chemistry, ranging from
the conversion of petrochemical feedstocks into industrial chemicals and
polymer precursors to the introduction of heteroatom functional groups into
pharmaceutical and agrochemical intermediates. Molecular oxygen (O2) would be
the ideal oxidant for these transformations. Whereas many commodity-scale
oxidations of simple hydrocarbon feedstocks employ O2 as an oxidant, methods
for selective oxidation of more complex molecules bearing diverse functional
groups are often incompatible with existing aerobic oxidation methods. The
latter limitation provides the basis for our interest in the development of new
catalytic transformations and the elucidation of mechanistic principles that
underlie selective aerobic oxidation reactions. One challenge inherent in such
methods is the incommensurate redox stoichiometry associated with the use of
O2, a four-electron oxidant, in reactions that achieve two-electron oxidation
of organic molecules.
Website: http://www.arjonline.org/physical-sciences/american-research-journal-of-chemistry/
Website: http://www.arjonline.org/physical-sciences/american-research-journal-of-chemistry/
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