Abstract

Di-n-hexyl telluride (2), di-p-methoxyphenyl telluride (3), and (S)-2-(1-N,N-dimethylaminoethyl)phenyl phenyl telluride (4) catalyzed the oxidation of PhSH to PhSSPh with H(2)O(2) in MeOH. Telluride 2 displayed greater rate acceleration than the diaryltellurides 3 and 4 as determined by the initial velocities, v(0), for the rate of appearance of PhSSPh determined at 305 nm by stopped-flow spectroscopy. Rate constants for the oxidation of tellurides 2-4 (k(ox)), rate constants for the introduction of PhSH as a ligand to the Te(IV) center (k(PhSH)) of oxidized tellurides 5-7, and thiol-independent (k(1)) and thiol-dependent (k(2)) rate constants for reductive elimination at Te(IV) in oxidized tellurides 5-7 were determined using stopped-flow spectroscopy. Oxidation of the Te atom of the electron-rich dialkyl telluride 2 was more rapid than oxidation of diaryl tellurides 3 and 4. The dimethylaminoethyl substituent of 4, which acts as a chelating ligand to Te(IV), did not affect k(ox). Values of k(PhSH) for the introduction of PhSH to oxidized dialkyl tellurane 5 and oxidized diaryl tellurane 6 were comparable in magnitude, while the chelating dimethylaminoethyl ligand of oxidized telluride 7 diminished k(PhSH) by a fator of 10(3). Reductive elimination by both first-order, thiol-independent (k(1)) and second-order, thiol-dependent (k(2)) pathways was slower from dialkyl Te(IV) species derived from 2 than from diaryl Te(IV) species derived from 3. The chelating dimethylaminoethyl ligand of Te(IV) species derived from 4 diminished k(1) by a factor of 50 and k(2) by a factor of 3 (relative to the 3-derived species).

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