Behera, PK; Choudhury, P; Sahu, SK; Sahu, RR; Harvat, AN; McNulty, C; Stitgen, A; Scanlon, J; Kar, M; Rout, L in [Behera, Pradyota Kumar; Choudhury, Prabhupada; Sahu, Santosh Kumar; Sahu, Rashmi Ranjan; Rout, Laxmidhar] Berhampur Univ, Dept Chem, Berhampur 760007, Orissa, India; [Rout, Laxmidhar] IISER, Dept Chem, Berhampur 760010, Odisha, India; [Harvat, Alisha N.; McNulty, Caitlin; Stitgen, Abigail; Scanlon, Joseph] Ripon Coll, Ripon, WI 54971 USA; [Kar, Manoranjan] IIT Patna, Patna 801106, Bihar, India published Oxygen Bridged Bimetallic CuMoO4 Nanocatalyst for Benzylic Alcohol Oxidation; Mechanism and DFT Study in 2021, Cited 113. Recommanded Product: 105-13-5. The Name is (4-Methoxyphenyl)methanol. Through research, I have a further understanding and discovery of 105-13-5.
Though concept of oxygen bridged bimetallic catalyst for organic reaction is not well understood. Herein, we have tried to explain the concept by experimental as well as its support by full DFT study. We report here a competent protocol for dehydrogenative oxidation of benzylic alcohol using an oxygen bridged bimetallic CuMoO4 nano catalyst. Careful demonstration reveals that oxidation is not effective either with mono-metallic Cu (II) or Mo(VI); instead combination of both the metals through the oxygen bridge [Cu-O-Mo] unexpectedly and interestingly catalyzed the reaction efficiently. The new concept is strongly supported by computational DFT study. DFT study reveals dehydrogenative oxidation is preferred at copper centre over molybdenum and aromatic benzyl alcohols are greatly stabilised. Interaction barrier energy of monometallic CuO and MoO3 catalyst is much higher than bimetallic CuMoO4. Hydrogen transfer has larger barrier heights for CuO (31.5 kcal/mol) and MoO3 (40.3 kcal/mol) than bimetallic CuMoO4.
About (4-Methoxyphenyl)methanol, If you have any questions, you can contact Behera, PK; Choudhury, P; Sahu, SK; Sahu, RR; Harvat, AN; McNulty, C; Stitgen, A; Scanlon, J; Kar, M; Rout, L or concate me.. Recommanded Product: 105-13-5
Reference:
Alcohol – Wikipedia,
,Alcohols – Chemistry LibreTexts