Greetings everybody, I have a theoretical question:
I'm trying to convert farnesol into ω−hydroxylated farnesol (a diol). One notable procedure involves protecting the hydroxyl group in form of ester, followed by an oxidation with SeO2 in relatively mild conditions. However, the problem is (and also reported in literature) that the reaction produces a mixture of two hydroxylated isomers in quite modest yield (around 40%). The same reaction for a shorter chain terpene (e.g. geranol) is much more successful, which has sense.
Now, I'm considering the idea that some kind of modification of SeO2 could maybe increase selectivity of the oxidation.
Do you know about any organmetallic selenium catalyst used for oxidation? Are there at all any selenium catalysts where selenium is used as central species and has various ligands bonded to it, like in cases of common organometallic catalysts that contain transition metals?