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Pinnick oxidation

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The Pinnick oxidation is an organic reaction by which aldehydes can be oxidized into their corresponding carboxylic acids using sodium chlorite (NaClO2) under mild acidic conditions. It was originally developed by Lindgren and Nilsson.[1] The typical reaction conditions used today were developed by G. A. Kraus.[2][3] H.W. Pinnick later demonstrated that these conditions could be applied to oxidize α,β-unsaturated aldehydes.[4] There exist many different reactions to oxidize aldehydes, but only a few are amenable to a broad range of functional groups. The Pinnick oxidation has proven to be both tolerant of sensitive functionalities and capable of reacting with sterically hindered groups. This reaction is especially useful for oxidizing α,β-unsaturated aldehydes, and another one of its advantages is its relatively low cost.[4][5]

PinnickOxidationReaction
PinnickOxidationReaction

Mechanism

The proposed reaction mechanism involves chlorous acid as the active oxidant, which is formed under acidic conditions from chlorite.

ClO2 + H2PO4 ⇌ HClO2 + HPO42−

First, the chlorous acid adds to the aldehyde. Then resulting structure undergoes a pericyclic fragmentation in which the aldehyde hydrogen is transferred to an oxygen on the chlorine, with the chlorine group released as hypochlorous acid (HOCl).[6]

Side reactions and scavengers

The HOCl byproduct is itself a reactive chemical that can destroy the NaClO2 reactant or cause other undesired reactions with the organic materials.[6] To prevent this interference, various scavengers are usually added to the reaction to consume the HOCl as it is formed.

The most general problem with the HOCl is that it reacts readily with unreacted chlorite ions, making that material unavailable for the intended Pinnick oxidation reaction:

HOCl + 2ClO2 → 2ClO2 + Cl + OH

An additional interference is that HOCl can react with double bonds in the organic reactant or product via a halohydrin formation reaction. However, one can take advantage of the propensity of HOCl to undergo this addition reaction by adding a sacrificial alkene-containing chemical to the reaction mixture. This alternate substrate reacts with the HOCl, preventing the HOCl from undergoing reactions that interfere with the Pinnick reaction itself. 2-Methyl-2-butene is often used in this context:

Resorcinol and sulfamic acid are also common scavenger reagents.[6][7]

Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) can be used as HOCl scavenger whose byproducts do not interfere in the Pinnick oxidation reaction:

HOCl + H2O2 → HCl + O2 + H2O

In a weakly acidic condition, fairly concentrated (35%) H2O2 solution undergoes a rapid oxidative reaction with no competitive reduction reaction of HClO2 to form HOCl.

HClO2 + H2O2 → HOCl + O2 + H2O

Chlorine dioxide reacts rapidly with H2O2 to form chlorous acid.

2ClO2 + H2O2 → 2HClO2 + O2

Also the formation of oxygen gives good indication of the progress of the reaction. DMSO has been used of instead of H2O2 to oxidize reactions that do not produce great yields using only H2O2. Mostly electron rich aldheydes fall under this category.[7] (See Limitation below)

Also, solid-supported reagents such as phosphate-buffered silica gel supported by potassium permanganate and polymer-supported chlorite have been prepared and used to convert aldehydes to carboxylic acid without having to do conventional work-up procedures. The reaction involves the product to be trapped on silica gel as their potassium salts. Therefore, this procedure facilitates easy removal of neutral impurities by washing with organic solvents.[8]

Scope and limitations

The reaction is highly suited for substrates with many group functionalities. β-aryl-substituted α,β-unsaturated aldehydes works well with the reaction conditions. Triple bonds directly linked to aldehyde groups or in conjugation with other double bonds can also be subjected to the reaction.[7][9] Hydroxides, epoxides, benzyl ethers, halides including iodides and even stannanes are quite stable in the reaction.[7][9][10][11] The examples of the reactions shown below also show that the stereocenters of the α carbons remain intact while double bonds, especially trisubsituted double bonds do not undergo E/Z–isomerization in the reaction.

Scope
Scope

Lower yields are obtained for reactions involving aliphatic α,β-unsaturated and more hydrophilic aldehydes. Double bonds and electron-rich aldehyde substrates can lead to chlorination as an alternate reaction. The use of DMSO in these cases gives better yield. Unprotected aromatic amines and pyrroles are not well suited for the reactions either. In particular, chiral α-aminoaldehydes do not react well due to epimerization and because amino groups can be easily transformed to their corresponding N-oxides. Standard protective group approaches, such as the use of t-BOC, are a viable solution to these problems.[12]

Thioethers are also highly susceptible to oxidation. For example, Pinnick oxidation of thioanisaldehyde gives a high yield of carboxylic acid products, but with concomitant conversion of the thioether to the sulfoxide or sulfone.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ Lindgren, Bengt O.; Nilsson, Torsten; Husebye, Steinar; Mikalsen, ØYvind; Leander, Kurt; Swahn, Carl-Gunnar (1973). "Preparation of Carboxylic Acids from Aldehydes (Including Hydroxylated Benzaldehydes) by Oxidation with Chlorite". Acta Chemica Scandinavica. 27: 888. doi:10.3891/acta.chem.scand.27-0888.
  2. ^ George A. Kraus; Bruce Roth (1980). "Synthetic studies toward verrucarol. 2. Synthesis of the AB ring system". The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 45: 4825. doi:10.1021/jo01312a004.
  3. ^ George A. Kraus; Michael J. Taschner (1980). "Model studies for the synthesis of quassinoids. 1. Construction of the BCE ring system". The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 45: 1175. doi:10.1021/jo01294a058.
  4. ^ a b Bal, B. S.; Childers, W.E.; Pinnick, H.W. (1981). "Oxidation of α,β-Unsaturated Aldehydes". Tetrahedron. 37: 2091–2096. doi:10.1016/S0040-4020(01)97963-3.
  5. ^ Mundy, B.J; Michael G. Ellerd; Frank G. Favaloro (2005). Name reactions and reagents in organic synthesis. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-22854-7.
  6. ^ a b c Kürti, László; Czakó, Barbara (2005). "Pinnick Oxidation". Strategic applications of named reactions in organic synthesis: background and detailed mechanisms. Elsevier. pp. 354–356. ISBN 9780124297852.
  7. ^ a b c d e Dalcanale, E; Montanari, F (1986). "Selective Oxidation of Aldehydes to Carboxylic Acids with Sodium Chlorite-Hydrogen Peroxide". J. Org. Chem. 51: 567–569. doi:10.1021/jo00354a037.
  8. ^ Takemoto, T.; Yasuda, K.; Ley, S.V. (2001). "Solid-Supported Reagents for the Oxidation of Aldehydes to Carboxylic Acids". Synlett. 10: 1555–1556. doi:10.1055/s-2001-17448.
  9. ^ a b Raach, A.; Reiser, O. (2000). "Sodium Chlorite-Hydrogen Peroxide, a Mild and Selective Reagent for the Oxidation of Aldehydes to Carboxylic Acids". J. Prakt. Chem. 342: 605–608. doi:10.1002/1521-3897.
  10. ^ Ishihara, J.; Hagihara, K.; Chiba, H.; Ito, K.; Yanagisawa, Y.; Totani, K; Tadano, K. (2000). "Synthetic studies of viridenomycin. Construction of the cyclopentene carboxylic acid part". Tetrahedron Lett. 41: 1771–1774. doi:10.1016/S0040-4039(00)00013-7.
  11. ^ Kuramochi, K.; Nagata, S.; Itaya, H.; Takao, H.; Kobayashi, S. (1999). "Convergent Total Synthesis of epolactaene: application of bridgehead oxiranyl anion strategy". Tetrahedron Lett. 40: 7371–7374. doi:10.1016/S0040-4039(99)01512-9.
  12. ^ Dehoux, C.; Fontaine, E.; Escudier, J.; Baltas, M.; Gorrichon, L. (1998). "Total Synthesis of Thymidine 2-Deoxypolyoxine C Analogue". J. Org. Chem. 63: 2601–2608. doi:10.1021/jo972116s.