Abstract

This article shows that Pd nanoparticles (NPs) poisoned by alkanethiolate monolayers can catalyze the isomerization of allyl alcohols to the corresponding carbonyl compounds in a relatively high efficiency and with a high selectivity. Pd nanoparticles are produced by the borohydride reduction of K 2PdCl 4 in toluene/H 2O using sodium S-dodecylthiosulfate as a source for the alkanethiolate ligands. Both kinetic and thermodynamic effects control the catalytic reactions of various substituted allyl alcohols. In general, less substituted allyl alcohols including prop-2-en-1-ol and pent-1-en-3-ol are isomerized to the corresponding aldehyde or ketone more efficiently. More substituted allyl alcohols such as but-2-en-1-ol and 3-methylbut-2-en-1-ol do not undergo isomerization under the same condition. However, the presence of reactive, less substituted allyl alcohols is found to promote the isomerization of poorly reactive, more substituted allyl alcohols.

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