Rate Enhancement of Acid-Catalyzed Alcohol Dehydration by Supramolecular Organic Capsules

The presence of a (sub)­nanometric environment has been demonstrated to enhance the rate of homogeneous acid-catalyzed reactions. Conventionally, such catalysts are constructed by directly embedding a catalytically active acid site into the structure of a porous material, linking the acid properties...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS catalysis 2020-11, Vol.10 (22), p.13371-13376
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Wei, Cheng, Guanhua, Haller, Gary L, Liu, Yue, Lercher, Johannes A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The presence of a (sub)­nanometric environment has been demonstrated to enhance the rate of homogeneous acid-catalyzed reactions. Conventionally, such catalysts are constructed by directly embedding a catalytically active acid site into the structure of a porous material, linking the acid properties with the properties of the embedding solid. In this work, a holoenzyme mimicking approach was used, in which a self-assembled hexameric resorcinarene capsule (1.4 nm3 cavity) acts like an apoenzyme that transforms into a catalytically active site by hosting hydrated HCl as a cofactor. This capsule binds the hydronium ion together with cyclohexanol (CyOH) and catalyzes the dehydration to cyclohexene with enhanced rates that are 2 orders of magnitude higher than those in the unconstrained environment. Kinetic analysis shows that cyclohexanol dehydration proceeds via an E2 mechanism on hydrated HCl in the unconstrained environment, while the constrained environment of the active capsule induces the stabilization of an ionic intermediate, allowing an E1 mechanism to dominate. By comparison with the reaction in zeolite environments, we show that the direct chemical environment of the capsule or a zeolite wall exerts only a minor direct influence. The volume constraint increases the reaction rate by inducing a larger activation entropy, indicating the stabilization of a later transition state in the E1 mechanism, as well as a higher reaction space of the carbenium ion constituting the transition state.
ISSN:2155-5435
2155-5435
DOI:10.1021/acscatal.0c03625