The one-step oxidation of benzene to phenol represents a significant and promising advancement in modern industries focused on the production of high-value-added chemical products. Nevertheless, challenges persist in achieving sufficient catalytic selectivity and preventing over-oxidation. Inspired by copper enzymes, we present a nonsymmetric dicopper complex ([CuII2(TPMAN)(μ-OH)(HO)], 1) for the selective oxidation of benzene to phenol. Utilizing HO as the oxidant, complex 1 demonstrates remarkable catalytic activity (a TON of 14 000 within 29 hours) and selectivity exceeding 97%, comparable to the finest homogeneous catalyst derived from first-row transition metals. It is noteworthy that the significant substituent effect, alongside a negligible kinetic isotope effect (KIE = 1.05), radical trapping experiments, and an inconsistent standard selectivity test of the ˙OH radicals, all contradict the conventional Fenton mechanism and rebound pathway. Theoretical investigations indicate that the active Cu(μ-O˙)Cu-OH species generated through the cleavage of the O-O bond in the Cu(μ-1,1-OOH)Cu intermediate facilitates the hydroxylation of benzene an electrophilic attack mechanism. The nonsymmetric coordination geometry is crucial in activating HO and in the process of O-O bond cleavage.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4dt02872d | DOI Listing |
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