Non-heme manganese(ii) complex-catalysed oxidative cleavage of 1,2-diols via alcohol-assisted O2 activation†
Abstract
Bio-inspired oxidation strategies are gaining increasing interest in the synthesis of fine and commodity chemicals. In particular, the development of catalytic oxidation systems with bio-relevant metal complexes capable of activating molecular oxygen (O2) is of utmost interest. In this work, a well-defined non-heme Mn(II) complex is found to catalyse, under the irradiation of blue light, the efficient aerobic oxidative cleavage of 1,2-diols to afford valuable carbonyl compounds and five-membered heterocycles. The photo-promoted catalysis allows for aromatic, aliphatic as well as bio-derived 1,2-diols to be cleaved, while tolerating a broad range of functional groups. Preliminary mechanistic investigation suggests that the catalytic cycle features two sequential redox events, with the first involving one alcohol molecule reducing one oxygen atom of O2 to water while promoting the formation of an active Mn-oxo species, which cleaves a second alcohol molecule in the subsequent event.