The phosphomolybdate salts Q3[PMo12O40] [Q = tetra-n-butylammonium (TBA), n-butylpyridinium (BP), cetylpyridinium (CP)] have been used as catalysts for the epoxidation of cyclooctene under organic solvent-free conditions, using H2O2 or t-BuOOH (TBHP) in water as oxidants, and compared with the BP salt of the analogous tungsten derivative, (BP)3[PW12O40]. High catalytic activities have been recorded down to very low catalyst loadings (2 ppm). The activity and selectivity depend on the oxidant and cation nature. The dominant process appears to be homogeneous and this rationalizes, together with the evolution of the phase equilibria, the presence of an induction period for the epoxidation by H2O2 and the evolution of the epoxide selectivity. The recovered catalysts are reusable and exhibit equivalent reactivity.
The reaction between the oxometallic complexes Cp*(2)M(2)O(5) and Na(2)M'O(4) (M, M' = Mo, W) in a 1:10 molar ratio in an acidic aqueous medium constitutes a mild and selective entry into the anionic Lindqvist-type hexametallic organometallic mixed oxides [Cp*Mo(x)W(6-x)O(18)](-) [x = 6 (1), 5 (2), 1 (3), 0 (4)]. All of these compounds have been isolated as salts of nBu(4)N(+) (a), nBu(4)P(+) (b), and Ph(4)P(+) (c) cations and two of them (1 and 3) also with the n-butylpyridinium (nBuPyr(+), d) cation. The compounds have been characterized by elemental analyses, thermogravimetric analyses, electrospray mass spectrometry, and IR spectroscopy. The molecular identity and geometry of compounds 1c, 2a, and 2c have been confirmed by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Density functional theory calculations on models obtained by replacing Cp* with Cp (I-IV) have provided information on the assignment of the terminal M═O and bridging M-O-M vibrations.
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