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cooxidants

Cooxidants are substances that participate in oxidation reactions in tandem with a primary oxidant, often serving to regenerate the active oxidant or to generate reactive intermediates that propagate oxidation. They are central in catalytic oxidation where the oxidation state of the catalyst is cycled; the cooxidant supplies the oxidizing equivalents that allow the catalyst to return to its active form after a substrate is oxidized. In this sense, a cooxidant is not the main oxidant driving the substrate oxidation by itself, but rather supports the catalytic turnover.

Mechanisms include redox mediation, where the cooxidant shuttles electrons between substrate and catalyst; formation of radical

Applications span synthetic chemistry, environmental chemistry, and materials science. In heterogeneous and homogeneous catalysis, cooxidants enable

Because the term cooxidant is used in different ways, definitions vary by field. The common thread is

species
that
initiate
or
propagate
oxidation;
or
activation
of
molecular
oxygen
in
aerobic
systems
to
generate
reactive
species
at
the
catalyst
site.
aerobic
oxidations
using
O2
or
air,
avoiding
stoichiometric
oxidants.
In
photocatalysis
and
electrocatalysis,
cooxidants
supplement
a
primary
oxidant
to
improve
efficiency,
selectivity,
or
substrate
scope.
In
water
treatment,
cooxidants
may
help
generate
oxidizing
radicals
that
degrade
contaminants.
a
secondary
oxidant
that
works
with
another
oxidant
to
enable
or
enhance
oxidation,
often
through
catalyst
regeneration
or
radical
mediation.