In organic chemistry, an epoxide is a cyclic ether, where the ether forms a three-atom ring: two atoms of carbon and one atom of oxygen. This triangular structure has substantial ring strain, making epoxides highly reactive, more so than other ethers. They are produced on a large scale for many applications. In general, low molecular weight epoxides are colourless and nonpolar, and often volatile.
A polymer formed from epoxide precursors is called an epoxy. However, few if any of the epoxy groups in the resin survive the curing process.
Aside from ethylene oxide, most epoxides are generated when peroxide reagents donate a single oxygen atom to an alkene. Safety considerations weigh on these reactions because organic peroxides are prone to spontaneous decomposition or even combustion.
Both t-butyl hydroperoxide and ethylbenzene hydroperoxide can be used as oxygen sources during propylene oxidation (although a catalyst is required as well, and most industrial producers use dehydrochlorination instead).
Only ethylene produces an epoxide during incomplete combustion. Other alkenes fail to react usefully, even propylene, though TS-1 supported Gold catalysts can selectively epoxidize propylene.
Typical laboratory operations employ the Prilezhaev reaction.March, Jerry. 1985. Advanced Organic Chemistry, Reactions, Mechanisms and Structure. 3rd ed. John Wiley & Sons. . This approach involves the oxidation of the alkene with a peroxyacid such as mCPBA. Illustrative is the epoxidation of styrene with perbenzoic acid to styrene oxide:
The stereochemistry of the reaction is quite sensitive. Depending on the mechanism of the reaction and the geometry of the alkene starting material, cis and/or trans epoxide may be formed. In addition, if there are other stereocenters present in the starting material, they can influence the stereochemistry of the epoxidation.
The reaction proceeds via what is commonly known as the "Butterfly Mechanism". The peroxide is viewed as an electrophile, and the alkene a nucleophile. The reaction is considered to be concerted. The butterfly mechanism allows ideal positioning of the sigma star orbital for π electrons to attack. Because two bonds are broken and formed to the epoxide oxygen, this is formally an example of a coarctate transition state.
Formation of epoxides from secondary halohydrins is predicted to occur faster than from primary halohydrins due to increased entropic effects in the secondary halohydrin, and tertiary halohydrins react (if at all) extremely slowly due to steric crowding.
Starting with propylene chlorohydrin, most of the world's supply of propylene oxide arises via this route.
An intramolecular epoxide formation reaction is one of the key steps in the Darzens reaction.
In the Johnson–Corey–Chaykovsky reaction epoxides are generated from carbonyl groups and . In this reaction, a sulfonium is the leaving group instead of chloride.
are intermediates in the oxidation of arenes by cytochrome P450. For prochiral arenes (naphthalene, toluene, , benzopyrene), the epoxides are often obtained in high enantioselectivity.
Lithium aluminium hydride or aluminium hydride both reduce epoxides through a simple nucleophilic addition of hydride (H−); they produce the corresponding alcohol.
With anhydrides, epoxides give polyesters.
Epoxides can be deoxygenated using oxophilic reagents, with loss or retention of configuration. The combination of tungsten hexachloride and N-Butyllithium gives the alkene.
When treated with thiourea or triphenylphosphine sulfide, epoxides convert to the episulfide (thiiranes). But triphenylphosphine selenide or a selenathiocarbamate in strong acid deoxygenates to the olefin instead.
The reaction of epoxides with amines is the basis for the formation of epoxy glues and structural materials. A typical amine-hardener is triethylenetetramine (TETA).
Biosynthesis
Reactions
Hydrolysis and addition of nucleophiles
Epoxides react with a broad range of nucleophiles, for example, alcohols, water, amines, thiols, and even halides. With two often-nearly-equivalent sites of attack, epoxides exemplify "ambident substrates". Ring-opening regioselectivity in asymmetric epoxides generally follows the SN2 pattern of attack at the least-substituted carbon, but can be affected by carbocation stability under acidic conditions. This class of reactions is the basis of epoxy glues and the production of glycols.
Polymerization and oligomerization
Metallation and deoxygenation
Other reactions
Uses
Safety
See also
Further reading
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