The ability of microemulsions to dissolve polar and non-polar components with a huge internal interface can overcome the reagent incompatibilities frequently encountered in organic reactions. We investigated model epoxidation reactions of alpha,beta-unsaturated enones and alkaline hydrogen peroxide in different nonionic microemulsions, both in the presence and absence of a phase-transfer agent (PTA). The obtained reaction profiles were compared with those for the corresponding surfactant-free two-phase systems. In addition, we defined a time constant tau as a measure for the rate of turnover. The epoxidation of trans-chalcone using an n-alkyl-polyoxyethylene surfactant based microemulsion was fastest in the system with the PTA (tau=66 min) and slightly slower without the PTA (tau=77 min). It was still slower in the two-phase system with a PTA (tau=114 min) and extremely sluggish without a phase-transfer agent. With n-alkyl beta-D-glucopyranoside as the surfactant the conversion was twice as fast than in the former microemulsion systems, but the PTA did not accelerate the reaction further (tau=35 and 33 min). The epoxidation of vitamin K(3), the second model system, was extremely accelerated. It proceeded a factor of approximately 35 faster in the microemulsion (tau=1.44 min) than in the corresponding two-phase system (tau=57 min).
Recently, it turned out that nanostructured reaction media containing highly inert solvents as tetrahydrothiophen-1,1-dioxide (sulfolane) are beneficial for strongly oxidizing or reductive reactions. Because of their ability of solubilizing polar and nonpolar solvents with a large nanostructured interface in particular microemulsions provide such interesting reaction media. Starting from the pseudoternary microemulsion H2O-n-octane-C12E4/C12E5 (polyoxyethylene n-alkyl ether), water was successively replaced by the highly inert tetrahydrothiophen-1,1-dioxide (sulfolane). We found that an increasing sulfolane content drives the system beyond the tricritical point. Replacing the already long chain surfactants C12E4 and C12E5 by a mixture of the even longer chain surfactants C18E6 and C18E8, we were able to prepare nonaqueous sulfolane microemulsions for the first time. We also teach how in a second step the phase behavior of the hydrophilic sulfolane-n-octane-C18E8 system can be tuned at constant temperature (as required by the reaction conditions) by addition of the hydrophobic cosurfactant 1-octanol (C8E0). The change in curvature that occurs by adding 1-octanol is demonstrated measuring the size of reverse micelles by DLS. We found that the radius varies from at least 8 to 16 nm, a suitable sizes for inverse nanoreaction vessels.
Microemulsions are used by A. Berkessel et al. on pp. 7565 ff. in epoxidation reactions to investigate how these would accelerate the reactions. The model epoxidation reactions involved α,β‐unsaturated enones and alkaline hydrogen peroxide in different nonionic microemulsions, both in the presence and absence of a phase‐transfer agent (PTA).
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