Abstract

The oxidation of cycloalkanes or alkylarenes with molecular oxygen and acetaldehyde as sacrificial co-reductant occurs efficiently in compressed (supercritical) carbon dioxide (scCO2) under mild multiphase conditions. No catalyst is required and high-pressure ATR-FTIR online measurements show that a radical reaction pathway is heterogeneously initiated by the stainless steel of the reactor walls. For secondary carbon atoms, high ketone to alcohol ratios are observed (3.5-7.9), most probably due to fast consecutive oxidation of alcoholic intermediates. Since C--C scission reactions are detected only to a very small extent, tertiary carbon atoms are transformed into the corresponding alcohols with high selectivity. Detailed analysis of the product distributions and other mechanistic evidence suggest that acetaldehyde acts not only as the sacrificial oxygen acceptor, but also as an efficient H-atom donor for peroxo and oxo radicals and as a crucial reductant for hydroperoxo intermediates. In comparison to other inert gases such as compressed N2 or Ar, the use of carbon dioxide was shown to increase the yields of alkane oxygenates under identical reaction conditions.

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