Elbs persulfate oxidation
The Elbs persulfate oxidation is the organic reaction of phenols with alkaline potassium persulfate to form para-diphenols.[1]
Elbs persulfate oxidation | |
---|---|
Named after | Karl Elbs |
Reaction type | Organic redox reaction |
Identifiers | |
RSC ontology ID | RXNO:0000179 |
Reaction mechanism
A reaction mechanism has been postulated which accounts for the observed para substitution featuring the tautomeric para carbanion of the starting phenolate ion:[5] It begins with nucleophilic displacement on the peroxide oxygen of the peroxodisulfate (peroxydisulfate) ion, to give an intermediate sulfate group (3), which is then hydrolyzed to the hydroxyl group.
The reaction is disadvantaged by low chemical yields with recovery of starting material and complete consumption of the persulfate. It is suggested that the phenol in many cases is a catalyst converting the persulfate into a sulfate.
gollark: Like "trusted computing".
gollark: It's probably some thing which aims to take control away from users by having a magic opaque chip you can't control do things.
gollark: > I thought it was going to break the entire filesystem and I'd have to reinstall everythingYou probably could just mount it from linux?
gollark: MacOS thing.
gollark: Look into "fbterm"?
See also
References
- Elbs, K. (1893). "Ueber Nitrohydrochinon". J. Prakt. Chem. (in German). 48: 179–185. doi:10.1002/prac.18930480123.
- Sethna, S. M. (1951). "The Elbs Persulfate Oxidation". Chem. Rev. 49 (1): 91–101. doi:10.1021/cr60152a002.
- Lee, J. B.; Uff, B. C. (1967). "Organic reactions involving electrophilic oxygen". Quart. Rev. 21 (4): 453. doi:10.1039/qr9672100429.
- Behrman, E. J. (1988). "The Persulfate Oxidation of Phenols and Arylamines (The Elbs and the Boyland-Sims Oxidations)". Org. React. 35. pp. 421–511. doi:10.1002/0471264180.or035.02. ISBN 0471264180.
- Behrman, E. J. (2006). "The Elbs and Boyland-Sims peroxydisulfate oxidations". Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry. 2 (1): 22. doi:10.1186/1860-5397-2-22. PMC 1697820. PMID 17090305.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.