Organic compounds with a carbon-carbon-oxygen ring
In organic chemistry, an epoxide is a cyclic ether, where the ether forms a three-atom ring: two atoms of carbon and one atom of oxygen. This triangular structure has substantial ring strain, making epoxides highly reactive, more so than other ethers. They are produced on a large scale for many applications. In general, low molecular weight epoxides are colourless and nonpolar, and often volatile.[1]
Nomenclature
A compound containing the epoxide functional group can be called an epoxy, epoxide, oxirane, and ethoxyline. Simple epoxides are often referred to as oxides. Thus, the epoxide of ethylene (C2H4) is ethylene oxide (C2H4O). Many compounds have trivial names; for instance, ethylene oxide is called "oxirane". Some names emphasize the presence of the epoxide functional group, as in the compound 1,2-epoxyheptane, which can also be called 1,2-heptene oxide.
A polymer formed from epoxide precursors is called an epoxy. However, few if any of the epoxy groups in the resin survive the curing process.
Synthesis
The dominant epoxides industrially are ethylene oxide and propylene oxide, which are produced respectively on the scales of approximately 15 and 3 million tonnes/year.[2]
Aside from ethylene oxide, most epoxides are generated when peroxidized reagents donate a single oxygen atom to an alkene. Safety considerations weigh on these reactions because organic peroxides are prone to spontaneous decomposition or even combustion.
Both t-butyl hydroperoxide and ethylbenzene hydroperoxide can be used as oxygen sources during propylene oxidation (although a catalyst is required as well, and most industrial producers use dehydrochlorination instead).[3]
Ethylene oxidation
The ethylene oxide industry generates its product from reaction of ethylene and oxygen. Modified heterogeneoussilver catalysts are typically employed.[4] According to a reaction mechanism suggested in 1974[5] at least one ethylene molecule is totally oxidized for every six that are converted to ethylene oxide:
Only ethylene produces an epoxide during incomplete combustion. Other alkenes fail to react usefully, even propylene, though TS-1 supported Au catalysts can selectively epoxidize propylene.[6]
Organic peroxides and metal catalysts
Metal complexes are useful catalysts for epoxidations involving hydrogen peroxide and alkyl hydroperoxides. Metal-catalyzed epoxidations were first explored using tert-butyl hydroperoxide (TBHP).[7] Association of TBHP with the metal (M) generates the active metal peroxy complex containing the MOOR group, which then transfers an O center to the alkene.[8]
Vanadium(II) oxide catalyzes the epoxidation at specifically less-substituted alkenes.[9]
Nucleophilic epoxidation
Electron-deficient olefins, such as enones and acryl derivatives can be epoxidized using nucleophilic oxygen compounds such as peroxides. The reaction is a two-step mechanism. First the oxygen performs a nucleophilic conjugate addition to give a stabilized carbanion. This carbanion then attacks the same oxygen atom, displacing a leaving group from it, to close the epoxide ring.
Transfer from peroxycarboxylic acids
Peroxycarboxylic acids, which are more electrophilic than other peroxides, convert alkenes to epoxides without the intervention of metal catalysts. In specialized applications, dioxirane reagents (e.g. dimethyldioxirane) perform similarly, but are more explosive.
The stereochemistry of the reaction is quite sensitive. Depending on the mechanism of the reaction and the geometry of the alkene starting material, cis and/or trans epoxide diastereomers may be formed. In addition, if there are other stereocenters present in the starting material, they can influence the stereochemistry of the epoxidation.
The reaction proceeds via what is commonly known as the "Butterfly Mechanism".[13] The peroxide is viewed as an electrophile, and the alkene a nucleophile. The reaction is considered to be concerted. The butterfly mechanism allows ideal positioning of the O−Osigma star orbital for C−C π electrons to attack.[14] Because two bonds are broken and formed to the epoxide oxygen, this is formally an example of a coarctate transition state.
Asymmetric epoxidations
Chiral epoxides can often be derived enantioselectively from prochiral alkenes. Many metal complexes give active catalysts, but the most important involve titanium, vanadium, and molybdenum.[15][16]
Halohydrins react with base to give epoxides.[20] The reaction is spontaneous because the energetic cost of introducing the ring strain (13 kcal/mol) is offset by the larger bond enthalpy of the newly introduced C-O bond (when compared to that of the cleaved C-halogen bond).
Formation of epoxides from secondary halohydrins is predicted to occur faster than from primary halohydrins due to increased entropic effects in the secondary halohydrin, and tertiary halohydrins react (if at all) extremely slowly due to steric crowding.
[21]
Ring-opening reactions dominate the reactivity of epoxides.
Hydrolysis and addition of nucleophiles
Epoxides react with a broad range of nucleophiles, for example, alcohols, water, amines, thiols, and even halides. With two often-nearly-equivalent sites of attack, epoxides exemplify "ambident substrates".[24] Ring-opening regioselectivity in asymmetric epoxides generally follows the SN2 pattern of attack at the least-substituted carbon,[25] but can be affected by carbocation stability under acidic conditions.[26] This class of reactions is the basis of epoxy glues and the production of glycols.[19]
Polymerization of epoxides gives polyethers. For example ethylene oxide polymerizes to give polyethylene glycol, also known as polyethylene oxide. The reaction of an alcohol or a phenol with ethylene oxide, ethoxylation, is widely used to produce surfactants:[28]
The reaction of epoxides with amines is the basis for the formation of epoxy glues and structural materials. A typical amine-hardener is triethylenetetramine (TETA).
^ abDietmar Kahlich, Uwe Wiechern, Jörg Lindner "Propylene Oxide" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry, 2002 by Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. doi:10.1002/14356007.a22_239
^Sajkowski, D. J.; Boudart, M. (1987). "Structure Sensitivity of the Catalytic Oxidation of Ethene by Silver". Catalysis Reviews. 29 (4): 325–360. doi:10.1080/01614948708078611.
^Kilty P. A.; Sachtler W. M. H. (1974). "The mechanism of the selective oxidation of ethylene to ethylene oxide". Catalysis Reviews: Science and Engineering. 10: 1–16. doi:10.1080/01614947408079624.
^Nijhuis, T. Alexander; Makkee, Michiel; Moulijn, Jacob A.; Weckhuysen, Bert M. (1 May 2006). "The Production of Propene Oxide: Catalytic Processes and Recent Developments". Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research. 45 (10): 3447–3459. doi:10.1021/ie0513090. hdl:1874/20149. S2CID94240406.
^Indictor N., Brill W. F. (1965). "Metal Acetylacetonate Catalyzed Epoxidation of Olefins with t-Butyl Hydroperoxide". J. Org. Chem. 30 (6): 2074. doi:10.1021/jo01017a520.
^Thiel W. R. (1997). "Metal catalyzed oxidations. Part 5. Catalytic olefin epoxidation with seven-coordinate oxobisperoxo molybdenum complexes: a mechanistic study". Journal of Molecular Catalysis A: Chemical. 117: 449–454. doi:10.1016/S1381-1169(96)00291-9.
^Paul D. Bartlett (1950). "Recent work on the mechanisms of peroxide reactions". Record of Chemical Progress. 11: 47–51.
^John O. Edwards (1962). Peroxide Reaction Mechanisms. Interscience, New York. pp. 67–106.
^Berrisford, D. J.; Bolm, C.; Sharpless, K. B. (2003). "Ligand-Accelerated Catalysis". Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 95 (10): 1059–1070. doi:10.1002/anie.199510591.
^Sheldon R. A. (1980). "Synthetic and mechanistic aspects of metal-catalysed epoxidations with hydroperoxides". Journal of Molecular Catalysis. 1: 107–206. doi:10.1016/0304-5102(80)85010-3.
^Bruce Rickborn and Wallace E. Lamke (1967). "Reduction of epoxides. II. The lithium aluminum hydride and mixed hydride reduction of 3-methylcyclohexene oxide". J. Org. Chem.32 (3): 537–539. doi:10.1021/jo01278a005.
^Kosswig, Kurt (2002). "Surfactants". In Elvers, Barbara; et al. (eds.). Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Weinheim, GER: Wiley-VCH. doi:10.1002/14356007.a25_747. ISBN978-3527306732.
^Julie M. Longo; Maria J. Sanford; Geoffrey W. Coates (2016). "Ring-Opening Copolymerization of Epoxides and Cyclic Anhydrides with Discrete Metal Complexes: Structure–Property Relationships". Chem. Rev. 116 (24): 15167–15197. doi:10.1021/acs.chemrev.6b00553. PMID27936619.
^B. Mudryk; T. Cohen (1995). "1,3-Diols From Lithium Β-lithioalkoxides Generated By The Reductive Lithiation Of Epoxides: 2,5-dimethyl-2,4-hexanediol". Org. Synth. 72: 173. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.072.0173.
^Takuya Nakagiri; Masahito Murai; Kazuhiko Takai (2015). "Stereospecific Deoxygenation of Aliphatic Epoxides to Alkenes under Rhenium Catalysis". Org. Lett. 17 (13): 3346–9. doi:10.1021/acs.orglett.5b01583. PMID26065934.
^K. Barry Sharpless; Martha A. Umbreit; Marjorie T. Nieh; Thomas C. Flood (1972). "Lower valent tungsten halides. New class of reagents for deoxygenation of organic molecules". J. Am. Chem. Soc.94 (18): 6538–6540. doi:10.1021/ja00773a045.
^Sasaki, Hiroshi (February 2007). "Curing properties of cycloaliphatic epoxy derivatives". Progress in Organic Coatings. 58 (2–3): 227–230. doi:10.1016/j.porgcoat.2006.09.030.
^Niederer, Christian; Behra, Renata; Harder, Angela; Schwarzenbach, René P.; Escher, Beate I. (2004). "Mechanistic approaches for evaluating the toxicity of reactive organochlorines and epoxides in green algae". Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. 23 (3): 697–704. doi:10.1897/03-83. PMID15285364. S2CID847639.