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Improved Potassium Permanganate Oxidation of
Alkenes to Diols using Phase Transfer Catalysis

W.P. Weber & J.P. Shepherd
Tet. Lett. 4907-4908 (1972)

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Phase transfer catalysis (PTC) and crown ethers are two newer methods which have been utilized to make inorganic salts soluble in organic solvents. Starks has reported that terminal olefins can be oxidized by KMnO4 using PTC to the one carbon shorter carboxylic acid1. Similarly, Sam and Simmons find that dicyclohexyl-18-crown-6 ether complex of KMnO4 is effective in quantitatively oxidising internal olefins to diacids2.

We should like to report that PTC can be used to oxidize internal olefins with basic KMnO4 to the corresponding cis-1,2-glycols in 50% yield. While the oxidation of olefins to cis-1,2-glycols by basic KMnO4 appears in many undergraduate organic textbooks3, it is with but a few exceptions (such as the oxidation of long chain mono unsaturated fatty acids)4 a poor reaction. Cope, for example, reports that cis-cyclooctene is oxidised to the cis-1,2-cyclooctanediol by aqueous basic KMnO4 - in only 7% yield5.

This led to other methods to achieve this transformation - such as osmium tetraoxide, which is both expensive and toxic6,7,8 or Woodward's procedure which involves reaction of the olefin with iodine and silver acetate in moist acetic acid9,10.

Experimental

The oxidation of cis-cyclooctene with basic KMnO4 is an example of the new PTC method.

cis-cyclooctene (11 grams, 0.1 mole) in 100 ml of DCM was placed In a 1-L three necked round bottom flask equipped with a mechanical stirrer. To this was added 100 ml of a 40% aqueous NaOH solution and 1 gram of benzyltriethylammonium chloride11 (the PTC catalyst). The reaction was cooled to 0°C in an ice salt bath. Small portions of KMnO4 (15.8 grams, 0.1 mole) were added over two hours with vigorous stirring and maintenance of the reaction temperature at 0°C. The reaction flask was packed in ice and let stir overnight. The MnO2 precipitate was dissolved by reaction with SO2. Ether (500 ml) was then added and the layers separated. The aqueous layer was then extracted three times with 150 ml portions of ether. The combined ether extracts were dried over MgSO4, filtered, and the solvent removed by evaporation under reduced pressure. The white solid thus isolated (9-9.5 grams) was recrystallised from ethyl acetate/n-heptane to yield 7.8 grams (50% yield) of cis-1,2-cyclooctanediol, mp 76-77°C5. Its spectral properties, IR and NMR were also consistent with the assigned structure.

Similar yields have been obtained in the oxidation of trans-cyclododecene to yield trans-1,2-cyclododecanediol, mp 98-99°C12. Lower yields are obtained, however, if the glycol product is highly soluble in the aqueous phase. Thus in the oxidation of cyclohexene in addition to a 15% yield of the desired cis-1,2-cyclohexanediol significant amounts of adipic acid are also obtained.

References

  1. S.M. Starks, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 93, 195 (1971)
  2. D.J. Sam and H.E. Simmons, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 94, 4024 (1972)
  3. R.T. Morrison and R.N. Boyd, Organic Chemistry, Allyn and Bacon, Inc., 1966, p. 894-895.
  4. A. Lapworth and Mottram, J. Chem. Soc., 127, 1628 (1925)
  5. A.C. Cope, S.W. Fenton, and C.F. Spencer, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 74, 5884 (1952)
  6. R. Criegee, et.al., Ann. Chem., 522, 75 (1936)
  7. L. Bláha, et. al., Coll. Czech. Chem. Comm., 25, 237 (1960)
  8. Th. Posternak and H Frledli, Helv. Chim. Acta., 36, 251 (1953)
  9. R.B. Woodward, U.S. Patent 2,687,435 (1954). Chem. Abstr. 49, 14809 (1955)
  10. F.D. Gunstone and L.J. Morris, J. Chem. Soc., 487 (1957)
  11. M. Makosza and M. Wawrzynlewicz, Tetrahedron Letters, 4659 (1969)
  12. V. Prelog and M. Speck, Helv. Chim. Acta, 38, 1786 (1955)