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Wacker process

 
Wacker Process

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Wacker process



 
 
The Wacker process or the Hoechst-Wacker process (named after the chemical companies of the same name) originally referred to the oxidation of ethylene
Ethylene

Ethylene is the chemical compound with the formula C2H4. It is the simplest alkene. Because it contains a carbon-carbon double bond, ethylene is called an unsaturated hydrocarbon or an olefin....
 to acetaldehyde
Acetaldehyde

Acetaldehyde is an organic compound with the chemical formula CarbonHydrogen3CHOxygen or MeCHO. It is a flammable liquid with a fruity smell....
 by oxygen
Oxygen

Oxygen no O2 produced; 2) O2 produced, but absorbed in oceans & seabed rock; 3) O2 starts to gas out of the oceans, but is absorbed by land surfaces and formation of ozone layer; 4-5) O2 sinks filled and the gas accumulates]]...
 in water in the presence of a tetrachloropalladate catalyst
Catalysis

Catalysis is the process in which the reaction rate of a chemical reaction is either increased or decreased by means of a chemical substance known as a catalyst....
. The same basic reaction is currently used to produce aldehydes and ketones from a number of alkenes with the Monsanto process
Monsanto process

The Monsanto process is an important method for the manufacture of acetic acid. This process operates at a pressure of 30-60 atmosphere and a temperature of 150-200 ?C and gives a selectivity greater than 99%....
 for producing acetic acid
Acetic acid

Acetic acid, CH3COOH, also known as ethanoic acid, is an organic acid which gives vinegar its sour taste and pungent smell. Pure, water-free acetic acid is a colourless liquid that absorbs water from the environment , and freezes at 16.7 Celsius to a colourless crystalline solid....
. This chemical reaction
Chemical reaction

A chemical reaction is a process that always results in the interconversion of chemical substances. The substance or substances initially involved in a chemical reaction are called reactants....
, a German invention, was the first organometallic and organopalladium
Organopalladium

Organopalladium chemistry is a branch of organometallic chemistry that deals with organic palladium compounds and their reactions. Palladium is often used as a catalyst in the reduction of alkenes and alkynes with hydrogen....
 reaction applied on an industrial scale.






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The Wacker process or the Hoechst-Wacker process (named after the chemical companies of the same name) originally referred to the oxidation of ethylene
Ethylene

Ethylene is the chemical compound with the formula C2H4. It is the simplest alkene. Because it contains a carbon-carbon double bond, ethylene is called an unsaturated hydrocarbon or an olefin....
 to acetaldehyde
Acetaldehyde

Acetaldehyde is an organic compound with the chemical formula CarbonHydrogen3CHOxygen or MeCHO. It is a flammable liquid with a fruity smell....
 by oxygen
Oxygen

Oxygen no O2 produced; 2) O2 produced, but absorbed in oceans & seabed rock; 3) O2 starts to gas out of the oceans, but is absorbed by land surfaces and formation of ozone layer; 4-5) O2 sinks filled and the gas accumulates]]...
 in water in the presence of a tetrachloropalladate catalyst
Catalysis

Catalysis is the process in which the reaction rate of a chemical reaction is either increased or decreased by means of a chemical substance known as a catalyst....
. The same basic reaction is currently used to produce aldehydes and ketones from a number of alkenes with the Monsanto process
Monsanto process

The Monsanto process is an important method for the manufacture of acetic acid. This process operates at a pressure of 30-60 atmosphere and a temperature of 150-200 ?C and gives a selectivity greater than 99%....
 for producing acetic acid
Acetic acid

Acetic acid, CH3COOH, also known as ethanoic acid, is an organic acid which gives vinegar its sour taste and pungent smell. Pure, water-free acetic acid is a colourless liquid that absorbs water from the environment , and freezes at 16.7 Celsius to a colourless crystalline solid....
. This chemical reaction
Chemical reaction

A chemical reaction is a process that always results in the interconversion of chemical substances. The substance or substances initially involved in a chemical reaction are called reactants....
, a German invention, was the first organometallic and organopalladium
Organopalladium

Organopalladium chemistry is a branch of organometallic chemistry that deals with organic palladium compounds and their reactions. Palladium is often used as a catalyst in the reduction of alkenes and alkynes with hydrogen....
 reaction applied on an industrial scale. The Wacker process is similar to hydroformylation
Hydroformylation

Hydroformylation, also known as oxo synthesis, is an important industrial process for the production of aldehydes from alkenes. This chemical reaction entails the addition of a formyl group and a hydrogen atom to a carbon-carbon double bond....
, which is also an industrial process and also leads to aldehyde
Aldehyde

An aldehyde is an organic compound containing a terminal carbonyl group. This functional group, which consists of a carbon atom bonded to a hydrogen atom and double bond to an oxygen atom , is called the aldehyde group....
 compounds. The differences are that hydroformylation promotes chain extension, and uses a rhodium
Rhodium

Rhodium is a chemical element that is a rare, silvery-white, hard transition metal and a member of the platinum group. Rhodium is found in platinum ores and is used in alloys with platinum and as a catalyst....
-based catalyst system. The Wacker process is an example of homogeneous catalysis
Homogeneous catalysis

Homogeneous catalysis is a chemistry term which describes catalysis where the catalyst is in the same phase as the reactants. It is the opposite to heterogeneous catalysis....
. The palladium complex with ethylene is reminiscent of Zeise's salt
Zeise's salt

File:Zeise's-salt-anion-from-xtal-3D-balls.pngFile:Zeise's-salt-anion-from-xtal-3D-SF.pngZeise's salt is the chemical compound with the chemical formula K[platinumCl3]....
, K[PtCl3(C2H4)] which is a heterogeneous catalyst
Heterogeneous catalysis

Heterogeneous catalysis is a chemistry term which describes catalysis where the catalyst is in a different phase to the reactants. Heterogeneous catalysts provide a surface for the chemical reaction to take place on....
.

Reaction mechanism

The modern understanding of the reaction mechanism
Reaction mechanism

In chemistry, a reaction mechanism is the step by step sequence of elementary reactions by which overall chemical change occurs .Although only the net chemical change is directly observation for most chemical reactions, experiments can often be designed that suggest the possible sequence of steps in a reaction mechanism....
 for the Wacker process (olefin oxidation via palladium(II) chloride) is described below:

The catalytic cycle
Catalytic cycle

A catalytic cycle in chemistry is a term for a multistep reaction mechanism that involves a catalyst . The catalytic cycle is the main method for describing the role of catalysts in biochemistry, organometallic chemistry, materials science, etc....
 can also be described as follows:

Note that all catalysts are regenerated and only the alkene and oxygen are consumed. Without copper(II) chloride
Copper(II) chloride

Copper chloride is the chemical compound with the chemical formula CuCl2. This a yellow-brown solid which slowly absorbs moisture to form a blue-green hydrate....
 and hydrochloric acid
Hydrochloric acid

Hydrochloric acid is the solution of hydrogen chloride in water. It is a highly corrosive, strong acid mineral acid and has major industrial uses....
 as oxidizing agent
Oxidizing agent

An oxidizing agent can be defined as either:#a chemical compound that readily transfers oxygen atoms, or#a substance that gains electrons in a redox chemical reaction...
s, Pd(0) (resulting from reductive elimination of Pd(II) in the final step) would precipitate out and the reaction would come to a halt (the stoichiometric reaction without catalyst regeneration was discovered in 1894). Air, pure oxygen, or a number of other oxidizers can then oxidise the resultant CuCl
Copper(I) chloride

Copper chloride, commonly called cuprous chloride, is the lower chloride of copper, with the formula CuCl. This colorless solid is a versatile precursor to other copper compounds, including some of commercial significance....
 back to CuCl2, allowing the cycle to repeat.

The initial stoichiometric reaction was first reported by Phillips and the Wacker reaction was first reported by Smidt et al..

Mechanism summary


Substantial mechanistic investigation on the olefin oxidation cycle has elucidated much of the oxidation process, though some questions remain. Several interesting key points were found:

(1) there is no H/D exchange seen in this reaction. Reaction runs with C2D4 in water generate CD3CDO, and runs with C2H4 in D2O generate CH3CHO. Thus, keto-enol tautomerization is not a possible mechanistic step.

(2) There is a negligible kinetic isotope effect
Kinetic isotope effect

The kinetic isotope effect is a dependence of the reaction rate of a chemical reaction on the isotope of an atom in a reactant. It is also called "isotope fractionation," although this term is somewhat broader in meaning....
 with fully deuterated reactants (k H/k D=1.07). Hence, it is inferred that hydride transfer is not a rate-determining step
Rate-determining step

The rate-determining step is a chemistry term for the slowest reaction step in a chemical reaction. The rate-determining step is often compared to the neck of a funnel; the rate at which water flows through the funnel is determined by the width of the neck, not by the speed at which water is poured in....
.

(3) a significant competitive isotope effect with C2H2D2, (k H/k D= ~1.9), suggests that the rate determining step should be prior to oxidized product formation.

For these reasons, modern understanding of this process has the rate-determining step occurring before a series of hydride rearrangements. However, it has been recognized that experimental conditions play a crucial role in which mechanistic pathway is taken.

The bulk of mechanistic studies on the Wacker Process debated whether nucleophilic attack occurred via an external (anti-addition) pathway or via an internal (syn-addition) pathway. Studies by Stille and coworkers apparently suggested that the Wacker Process proceeds via anti-addition, however these studies have been refuted as they assumed that changes in reaction conditions do not influence the reaction mechanism. However, other contemporary studies in high chloride concentration conditions also concluded that nucleophilic attack was an anti-addition reaction. Numerous textbooks have erroneously propagated these studies as proof that the reaction occurs via an anti-addition step when in fact the mechanism is more complicated. Subsequent stereochemical studies by Patrick M. Henry and coworkers confirmed that both pathways occur and are dependent on chloride concentrations.

In summary, it was determined that syn-addition occurs under low-chloride reaction concentrations (< 1 mol
Mole (unit)

The mole is a Units of measurement of amount of substance: it is an SI base unit, and one of the few units used to measure this physical quantity....
/L
Litér

Lit?r is a village in Veszpr?m , Hungary.External links ...
, industrial process conditions), while anti-addition occurs under high-chloride (> 3 mol/L) reaction concentrations. However, the exact pathway and the reason for this switching of pathways is still unknown.

Another key step in the Wacker process is the migration of the hydrogen from oxygen to chlorine and formation of the C-O double bond. This step is generally regarded to proceed through a so-called ß-hydride elimination with a four-membered cyclic transition state
Transition state

The transition state of a chemical reaction is a particular configuration along the reaction coordinate. It is defined as the state corresponding to the highest energy along this reaction coordinate....
:

Wacker Hydride Elimination
One in silico
In silico

In silico is an expression used to mean "performed on computer or via computer simulation." The phrase is coined in analogy to the Latin language phrases in vivo and in vitro which are commonly used in biology and refer to experiments done in living organisms and outside of living organisms, respectively....
 study argues that the transition state
Transition state

The transition state of a chemical reaction is a particular configuration along the reaction coordinate. It is defined as the state corresponding to the highest energy along this reaction coordinate....
 for this reaction step is unfavorable (activation energy 36.6 kcal/mol) and proposes an alternative reductive elimination reaction mechanism
Reaction mechanism

In chemistry, a reaction mechanism is the step by step sequence of elementary reactions by which overall chemical change occurs .Although only the net chemical change is directly observation for most chemical reactions, experiments can often be designed that suggest the possible sequence of steps in a reaction mechanism....
 in which the proton directly attaches itself to chlorine with an activation energy of 18.8 kcal/mol. The proposed reaction step gets assistance from a water molecule acting as a catalyst.

Wacker Transition State

Wacker-Tsuji oxidation

The so-called Wacker-Tsuji oxidation is the laboratory scale version of the above reaction, for example the conversion of 1-decene
Linear alpha olefin

Linear Alpha Olefins or Normal Alpha Olefins are olefins or alkenes with a chemical formula CarbonxHydrogen2x, distinguished from other mono-olefins with a similar molecular formula by linearity of the hydrocarbon chain and the position of the double bond at the primary or alpha position....
 to 2-decanone with palladium(II) chloride
Palladium(II) chloride

Palladium chloride, also known as palladium dichloride, are the chemical compounds with the chemical formula PdCl2. PdCl2 is a common starting material in palladium chemistry ? palladium-based catalysts are of particular value in organic synthesis....
 and copper(II) chloride
Copper(II) chloride

Copper chloride is the chemical compound with the chemical formula CuCl2. This a yellow-brown solid which slowly absorbs moisture to form a blue-green hydrate....
 in a water / dimethylformamide
Dimethylformamide

Dimethylformamide is the organic compound with the chemical formula 2NCH. Commonly abbreviated DMF, this colourless liquid is miscible with Water and the majority of organic liquids....
 solvent mixture in the presence of air