Issue 1, 2014

Kinetics and thermodynamics of the decarboxylation of 1,2-glycerol carbonate to produce glycidol: computational insights

Abstract

The kinetics and thermodynamics of the decarboxylation of 1,2-glycerol carbonate to yield glycidol were studied using “chemically accurate” quantum chemical calculations. Both base- and acid-catalyzed reactions were examined, as were the potential reactions that yield the 3-hydroxyoxetane isomer. Under all conditions, glycidol was the preferred product. While the free energy barrier for the alkoxide form of 1,2-glycerol carbonate to form the epoxide ring is low, the rate-determining step of the overall reaction is the loss of carbon dioxide from the resultant carbonate anion (ca. 21.7 kcal mol−1). Protonation of 1,2-glycerol carbonate is expected to be difficult, but decarboxylation henceforth is exergonic, and the free energy barrier is lower (12.3 kcal mol−1). Calculations also indicate that oligomerization of 1,2-glycerol carbonate (ΔG = 4.9 kcal mol−1), followed by degradation to glycidol, is unlikely on thermodynamic grounds.

Graphical abstract: Kinetics and thermodynamics of the decarboxylation of 1,2-glycerol carbonate to produce glycidol: computational insights

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Aug 2013
Accepted
05 Nov 2013
First published
05 Nov 2013

Green Chem., 2014,16, 247-252

Kinetics and thermodynamics of the decarboxylation of 1,2-glycerol carbonate to produce glycidol: computational insights

D. J. Darensbourg and A. D. Yeung, Green Chem., 2014, 16, 247 DOI: 10.1039/C3GC41643G

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