The use of organic solvents in the oxidation of I-dodecanethiol, catalyzed by cobalt( II) phthalocyanine-tetrasodiumsulfonate (CoPc(NaSO,),) /2,4-ionene, drastically influences the reaction mechanism. Without an organic solvent the reaction proceeds at the thiol-water phase boundary, where the ionen
Environment effects on the oxidation of thiols: cobalt phthalocyanine as a test case
✍ Scribed by Ilaria Ciofini; Fethi Bedioui; José H. Zagal; Carlo Adamo
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 280 KB
- Volume
- 376
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0009-2614
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✦ Synopsis
The reactivity of Co(II) phthalocyanine toward the oxidation of 2-mercaptoethanol was investigated using first principle theoretical methods. Calculations have been carried out using a hybrid Hartree-Fock/density functional approach (PBE0). Solvent effects have been included through a polarizable continuum model (C-PCM), while surface effects have been mimicked by a supramolecular (phthalocyanine + carbon cluster) approach. The influences of chemical environment and of the medium on reactivity were analyzed using two different reactivity descriptors, the donoracceptor intermolecular hardness and the electrophilicity index. Our results show that solvent and surface have a cooperative effect, both increasing the reactivity of the adsorbed complex.
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