- N,N-Chelate nickel(II) complexes bearing Schiff base ligands as efficient hydrogenation catalysts for amine synthesis
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Five N, N-chelate nickel (II) complexes bearing N-(2-pyridinylmethylene)-benzylamine ligands with different substituent groups were synthesized in good yields. The nickel complexes exhibited prominent catalytic efficiency toward amine synthesis from nitro compounds by using NaBH4 or H2 as hydrogen source through two catalytic systems. Various amines with different substituents were obtained in moderate to excellent yields. All substrates with electron-donating and electron-withdrawing properties were tolerated in the two reduction systems. Given the efficient catalytic activity, broad substance scope, and mild reduction conditions, the nickel catalysts have potential applications in industrial production.
- Xu, Mengyin,Wang, Yang,Zhou, Yifeng,Yao, Zi-Jian
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- Development and Application of Efficient Ag-based Hydrogenation Catalysts Prepared from Rice Husk Waste
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The development of strategies for the sustainable management and valorization of agricultural waste is of outmost importance. With this in mind, we report the use of rice husk (RH) as feedstock for the preparation of heterogeneous catalysts for hydrogenation reactions. The catalysts were prepared by impregnating the milled RH with a silver nitrate solution followed by carbothermal reduction. The composition and morphology of the prepared catalysts were fully assessed by IR, AAS, ICP-MS, XPS, XRD and STEM techniques. This novel bio-genic silver-based catalysts showed excellent activity and remarkable selectivity in the hydrogenation of nitro groups in both aromatic and aliphatic substrates, even in the presence of reactive functionalities like halogens, carbonyls, borate esters or nitriles. Recycling experiments showed that the catalysts can be easily recovered and reused multiple times without significant drop in performance and without requiring re-activation.
- Unglaube, Felix,Kreyenschulte, Carsten Robert,Mejía, Esteban
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p. 2583 - 2591
(2021/04/09)
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- Rhodium-terpyridine Catalyzed Transfer Hydrogenation of Aromatic Nitro Compounds in Water
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A rhodium terpyridine complex catalyzed transfer hydrogenation of nitroarenes to anilines with i-PrOH as hydrogen source and water as solvent has been developed. The catalytic system can work at a substrate/catalyst (S/C) ratio of 2000, with a turnover frequency (TOF) up to 3360 h?1, which represents one of the most active catalytic transfer hydrogenation systems for nitroarene reduction. The catalytic system is operationally simple and the protocol could be scaled up to 20 gram scale. The water-soluble catalyst bearing a carboxyl group could be recycled 15 times without significant loss of activity.
- Liu, Yuxuan,Miao, Wang,Tang, Weijun,Xue, Dong,Xiao, Jianliang,Wang, Chao,Li, Changzhi
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supporting information
p. 1725 - 1729
(2021/06/01)
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- Synthesis, Structure, and Catalytic Hydrogenation Activity of [NO]-Chelate Half-Sandwich Iridium Complexes with Schiff Base Ligands
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A series of N,O-coordinate iridium(III) complexes with a half-sandwich motif bearing Schiff base ligands for catalytic hydrogenation of nitro and carbonyl substrates have been synthesized. All iridium complexes showed efficient catalytic activity for the hydrogenation of ketones, aldehydes, and nitro-containing compounds using clean H2 as reducing reagent. The iridium catalyst displayed the highest TON values of 960 and 950 in the hydrogenation of carbonyl and nitro substrates, respectively. Various types of substrates with different substituted groups afforded corresponding products in excellent yields. All N,O-coordinate iridium(III) complexes 1-4 were well characterized by IR, NMR, HRMS, and elemental analysis. The molecular structure of complex 1 was further characterized by single-crystal X-ray determination.
- Lv, Wen-Rui,Li, Rong-Jian,Liu, Zhen-Jiang,Jin, Yan,Yao, Zi-Jian
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p. 8181 - 8188
(2021/05/26)
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- Highly Efficient and Chemoselective Hydrogenation of Nitro Compounds into Amines by Nitrogen-Doped Porous Carbon-Supported Co/Ni Bimetallic Nanoparticles
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A novel Co/Ni bimetallic nanoparticle supported by nitrogen-doped porous carbon (NPC), Co5/Ni@NPC-700, exhibits high conversion, chemoselectivity, and recyclability in the hydrogenation of 16 different nitro compounds into desired amines with hydrazine hydrate under mild conditions. The synergistic effects of Co/Ni bimetal nanoparticles and the NPC-supported porous honeycomb structure with more accessible active sites may be responsible for the high catalytic hydrogenation performance.
- Shen, Zeyu,Hong, Lirui,Zheng, Baishu,Wang, Guanyu,Zhang, Beibei,Wang, Zhaoxu,Zhan, Feiyang,Shen, Shaohua,Yun, Ruirui
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supporting information
p. 16834 - 16839
(2021/11/17)
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- A Pod-like Core-Shell Catalyst with High Reduction Performance Under Mild Conditions
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Recent years, tubular structure as the carrier loading nanoparticles has been reported more and more frequently which is synthesized by pyrolysis polyhedral MOFs. However, the construct mechanism has not been referred. Herein, a tubular structure has been designed by calcining modified ZIF-8 under different temperature to reveal the formation process of tubular carbon from the polyhedron. As a result, a pod-like core-shell catalyst of Fe/Fe3C-900 has been obtained and exhibits a high activity and excellent substituent tolerance for the reduction of nitro groups under mild conditions.
- Du, Liting,He, Lei,Li, Tuanhui,Luo, Shizhou,Xu, Fagong,Yun, Ruirui,Zhan, Feiyang,Zhang, Beibei,Zheng, Baishu
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- Self-regulated catalysis for the selective synthesis of primary amines from carbonyl compounds
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Most current processes for the general synthesis of primary amines by reductive amination are performed with enormously excessive amounts of hazardous ammonia. It remains unclear how catalysts should be designed to regulate amination reaction dynamics at a low ammonia-to-substrate ratio for the quantitative synthesis of primary amines from the corresponding carbonyl compounds. Herein we show a facile control of the reaction selectivity in the layered boron nitride supported ruthenium catalyzed reductive amination reaction. Specifically, locating ruthenium to the edge surface of layered boron nitride leads to an increased hydrogenation activity owing to the enhanced interfacial electronic effects between ruthenium and the edge surface of boron nitride. This enables self-accelerated reductive amination reactions which quantitatively synthesize structurally diverse primary amines by reductive amination of carbonyl compounds with twofold ammonia. This journal is
- Fan, Xiaomeng,Gao, Jin,Gao, Mingxia,Jia, Xiuquan,Ma, Jiping,Xu, Jie
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supporting information
p. 7115 - 7121
(2021/09/28)
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- Generation of Oxidoreductases with Dual Alcohol Dehydrogenase and Amine Dehydrogenase Activity
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The l-lysine-?-dehydrogenase (LysEDH) from Geobacillus stearothermophilus naturally catalyzes the oxidative deamination of the ?-amino group of l-lysine. We previously engineered this enzyme to create amine dehydrogenase (AmDH) variants that possess a new hydrophobic cavity in their active site such that aromatic ketones can bind and be converted into α-chiral amines with excellent enantioselectivity. We also recently observed that LysEDH was capable of reducing aromatic aldehydes into primary alcohols. Herein, we harnessed the promiscuous alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) activity of LysEDH to create new variants that exhibited enhanced catalytic activity for the reduction of substituted benzaldehydes and arylaliphatic aldehydes to primary alcohols. Notably, these novel engineered dehydrogenases also catalyzed the reductive amination of a variety of aldehydes and ketones with excellent enantioselectivity, thus exhibiting a dual AmDH/ADH activity. We envisioned that the catalytic bi-functionality of these enzymes could be applied for the direct conversion of alcohols into amines. As a proof-of-principle, we performed an unprecedented one-pot “hydrogen-borrowing” cascade to convert benzyl alcohol to benzylamine using a single enzyme. Conducting the same biocatalytic cascade in the presence of cofactor recycling enzymes (i.e., NADH-oxidase and formate dehydrogenase) increased the reaction yields. In summary, this work provides the first examples of enzymes showing “alcohol aminase” activity.
- Tseliou, Vasilis,Schilder, Don,Masman, Marcelo F.,Knaus, Tanja,Mutti, Francesco G.
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supporting information
p. 3315 - 3325
(2020/12/11)
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- Biochemical and Structural Characterization of an (R)-Selective Transaminase in the Asymmetric Synthesis of Chiral Hydroxy Amines
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An (R)-selective transaminase RbTA with excellent stereoselectivity (>99% ee) in the asymmetric amination of hydroxy ketones was identified. Biochemical characterization showed that RbTA exhibited the highest activity toward 4-hydroxy-2-butanone among reported enzymes, and that it has broad substrate specificity, including for aliphatic, aromatic, and alicyclic ketones. Crystallization of RbTA were performed, as were molecular docking and mutagenesis studies. Residue Tyr125 plays a key role in substrate recognition by forming a hydrogen bond with hydroxy ketone. The applicability of the enzyme was determined in preparative-scale synthesis of (R)-3-amino-1-butanol, demonstrating the potential of RbTA as a green biocatalyst for production of value-added chiral hydroxy amines. This study provides an efficient tool for enzymatic synthesis of chiral hydroxy amines, as well as structural insight into substrate recognition by transaminases in the asymmetric amination of hydroxy ketones. (Figure presented.).
- Li, Fulong,Liang, Youxiang,Wei, Yuwen,Zheng, Yukun,Du, Yan,Yu, Huimin
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supporting information
p. 4582 - 4589
(2021/08/07)
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- Synthesis of Chiral Amines via a Bi-Enzymatic Cascade Using an Ene-Reductase and Amine Dehydrogenase
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Access to chiral amines with more than one stereocentre remains challenging, although an increasing number of methods are emerging. Here we developed a proof-of-concept bi-enzymatic cascade, consisting of an ene reductase and amine dehydrogenase (AmDH), to afford chiral diastereomerically enriched amines in one pot. The asymmetric reduction of unsaturated ketones and aldehydes by ene reductases from the Old Yellow Enzyme family (OYE) was adapted to reaction conditions for the reductive amination by amine dehydrogenases. By studying the substrate profiles of both reported biocatalysts, thirteen unsaturated carbonyl substrates were assayed against the best duo OYE/AmDH. Low (5 %) to high (97 %) conversion rates were obtained with enantiomeric and diastereomeric excess of up to 99 %. We expect our established bi-enzymatic cascade to allow access to chiral amines with both high enantiomeric and diastereomeric excess from varying alkene substrates depending on the combination of enzymes.
- Fossey-Jouenne, Aurélie,Jongkind, Ewald P. J.,Mayol, Ombeline,Paul, Caroline E.,Vergne-Vaxelaire, Carine,Zaparucha, Anne
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- Palladium supported on magnesium hydroxyl fluoride: An effective acid catalyst for the hydrogenation of imines and N-heterocycles
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Palladium catalysts supported on acidic fluorinated magnesium hydroxide Pd/MgF2-x(OH)x were prepared through precipitation or impregnation methods. Applications to the hydrogenation of various aldimines and ketimines resulted in good catalytic activities at mild temperatures using one atmosphere of hydrogen. Quinolines, pyridines and other N-heterocycles were successfully hydrogenated at higher temperature and hydrogen pressure using low palladium loadings and without the use of any acid additive. Such reactivity trend confirmed the positive effect of the Br?nsted and Lewis acid sites from the fluorinated magnesium hydroxide support resulting in the effective pre-activation of N-heterocycle substrates and therefore in the good catalytic activity of the palladium nanoparticles during the hydrogenations. As demonstrated in the hydrogenation of imines, the catalyst was recycled up to 10 times without either loss of activity or palladium leaching. This journal is
- Agbossou-Niedercorn, Francine,Corre, Yann,Dongare, Mohan K.,Kemnitz, Erhard,Kokane, Reshma,Michon, Christophe,Umbarkar, Shubhangi B.
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supporting information
p. 19572 - 19583
(2021/11/04)
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- Catalytic Hydrogenation of Urea Derivatives and Polyureas
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We present herein the catalytic hydrogenation of various urea derivatives to amines and methanol. The reaction is catalyzed by a ruthenium or an iridium Macho pincer complex and produces amine and methanol in very good to excellent yields. Moreover, we also expand this concept to demonstrate the first example of the hydrogenative depolymerization of polyureas to produce diamines and methanol in moderate yields.
- Kumar, Amit,Luk, James
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supporting information
p. 4546 - 4550
(2021/08/30)
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- PRODUCTION METHOD OF CYCLIC COMPOUND
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PROBLEM TO BE SOLVED: To provide an industrially simple production method of a cyclic compound. SOLUTION: A production method of a cyclic compound includes a step to obtain a reduced form (B) by reducing an unsaturated bond in a ring structure of an aromatic compound (A) by means of catalytic hydrogenation of the aromatic compound (A) or its salt using palladium carbon as a catalyst under a normal pressure, in which the aromatic compound (A) has one or more ring structures selected from a group consisting of a five membered-ring, a six membered-ring, and a condensed ring of the five membered-ring or the six membered-ring with another six membered-ring, a hetero atom can be included in the ring structure, and the aromatic compound (A) can have one or two side chains bonded to the ring structure and does not have any carbon-carbon triple bond in the side chain. SELECTED DRAWING: None COPYRIGHT: (C)2021,JPOandINPIT
- -
-
Paragraph 0057; 0060; 0062; 0065
(2021/05/05)
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- Method for preparing amine through catalytic reduction of nitro compound by cyclic (alkyl) (amino) carbene chromium complex
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The cyclic (alkyl) (amino) carbene chromium complex is prepared from corresponding ligand salt, alkali and CrCl3 and used for catalyzing pinacol borane to reduce nitro compounds in an ether solvent under mild conditions to generate corresponding amine. The method for preparing amine has the advantages of cheap and accessible raw materials, mild reaction conditions, wide substrate application range, high selectivity and the like, and is simple to operate.
- -
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Paragraph 0015
(2021/04/17)
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- RhNPs supported onN-functionalized mesoporous silica: effect on catalyst stabilization and catalytic activity
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Amine and nicotinamide groups grafted on ordered mesoporous silica (OMS) were investigated as stabilizers for RhNPs used as catalysts in the hydrogenation of several substrates, including carbonyl and aryl groups. Supported RhNPs on functionalized OMS were prepared by controlled decomposition of an organometallic precursor of rhodium under dihydrogen pressure. The resulting materials were characterized thoroughly by spectroscopic and physical techniques (FTIR, TGA, BET, SEM, TEM, EDX, XPS) to confirm the formation of spherical rhodium nanoparticles with a narrow size distribution supported on the silica surface. The use of nicotinamide functionalized OMS as a support afforded small RhNPs (2.3 ± 0.3 nm), and their size and shape were maintained after the catalyzed acetophenone hydrogenation. In contrast, amine-functionalized OMS formed RhNP aggregates after the catalytic reaction. The supported RhNPs could selectively reduce alkenyl, carbonyl, aryl and heteroaryl groups and were active in the reductive amination of phenol and morpholine, using a low concentration of the precious metal (0.07-0.18 mol%).
- Pulido-Díaz, Israel T.,Serrano-Maldonado, Alejandro,López-Suárez, Carlos César,Méndez-Ocampo, Pedro A.,Portales-Martínez, Benjamín,Gutiérrez-Alejandre, Aída,Salas-Martin, Karla P.,Guerrero-Ríos, Itzel
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p. 3289 - 3298
(2021/03/16)
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- One-pot synthesis of cyclohexylamine and: N -aryl pyrroles via hydrogenation of nitroarenes over the Pd0.5Ru0.5-PVP catalyst
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The direct synthesis of cyclohexylamine via the hydrogenation of nitrobenzene over monometallic (Pd, Ru or Rh) and bimetallic (PdxRu1-x) catalysts was studied. The Pd0.5Ru0.5-PVP catalyst was the most effective catalyst for this reaction. The catalyst can be reused and applied for the synthesis of N-aryl pyrroles and quinoxalines from nitrobenzenes.
- Chaudhari, Chandan,Sato, Katsutoshi,Ikeda, Yasuyuki,Terada, Kenji,Abe, Naoya,Nagaoka, Katsutoshi
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supporting information
p. 9743 - 9746
(2021/06/15)
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- MATERIALS COMPRISING CARBON-EMBEDDED COBALT NANOPARTICLES, PROCESSES FOR THEIR MANUFACTURE, AND USE AS HETEROGENEOUS CATALYSTS
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The present invention relates to catalytically active material, comprising grains of non-graphitizing carbon with cobalt nanoparticles dispersed therein, wherein dP, the average diameter of cobalt nanoparticles in the non-graphitizing carbon grains, is in the range of 1 nm to 20 nm, D, the average distance between cobalt nanoparticles in the non-graphitizing carbon grains, is in the range of 2 nm to 150 nm, and ω, the combined total mass fraction of metal in the non-graphitizing carbon grains, is in the range of 30 wt% to 70 wt% of the total mass of the non-graphitizing carbon grains, and wherein dP, D and ω conform to the following relation: 4.5 dP / ω > D ≥ 0.25 dP / ω. The present invention, further, relates to a process for the manufacture of material according to the invention, as well as its use as a catalyst.
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Page/Page column 17; 19-20
(2021/03/13)
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- Ceria supported Ru0-Ruδ+ clusters as efficient catalyst for arenes hydrogenation
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Selective hydrogenation of aromatic amines, especially chemicals such as aniline and bis(4-aminocyclohexyl)methane for non-yellowing polyurethane, is of particular interests due to the extensive applications. To conquer the existing difficulties in selective hydrogenation, the Ru0-Ruδ+/CeO2 catalyst with solid frustrated Lewis pairs was developed for aromatic amines hydrogenation with excellent activity and selectivity under relative milder conditions. The morphology, electronic and chemical properties, especially the Ru0-Ruδ+ clusters and reducible ceria were characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), scanning electronic microscopy (SEM), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), CO2 temperature programmed desorption (CO2-TPD), H2 temperature programmed reduction (H2-TPR), H2 diffuse reflectance Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (H2-DRIFT), Raman, etc. The 2% Ru/CeO2 catalyst exhibited good conversion of 95% and selectivity greater than 99% toward cyclohexylamine. The volcano curve describing the activity and Ru state was found. Owning to the “acidic site isolation” by surrounding alkaline sites, condensation between the neighboring amine molecules could be effectively suppressed. The catalyst also showed good stability and applicability for other aromatic amines and heteroarenes containing different functional groups.
- Cao, Yanwei,Zheng, Huan,Zhu, Gangli,Wu, Haihong,He, Lin
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supporting information
p. 770 - 774
(2020/08/24)
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- Aromatic compound hydrogenation and hydrodeoxygenation method and application thereof
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The invention belongs to the technical field of medicines, and discloses an aromatic compound hydrogenation and hydrodeoxygenation method under mild conditions and application of the method in hydrogenation and hydrodeoxygenation reactions of the aromatic compounds and related mixtures. Specifically, the method comprises the following steps: contacting the aromatic compound or a mixture containing the aromatic compound with a catalyst and hydrogen with proper pressure in a solvent under a proper temperature condition, and reacting the hydrogen, the solvent and the aromatic compound under the action of the catalyst to obtain a corresponding hydrogenation product or/and a hydrodeoxygenation product without an oxygen-containing substituent group. The invention also discloses specific implementation conditions of the method and an aromatic compound structure type applicable to the method. The hydrogenation and hydrodeoxygenation reaction method used in the invention has the advantages of mild reaction conditions, high hydrodeoxygenation efficiency, wide substrate applicability, convenient post-treatment, and good laboratory and industrial application prospects.
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Paragraph 0094-0096; 0098; 0100-0104
(2021/05/29)
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- Chemoselective and Tandem Reduction of Arenes Using a Metal–Organic Framework-Supported Single-Site Cobalt Catalyst
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The development of heterogeneous, chemoselective, and tandem catalytic systems using abundant metals is vital for the sustainable synthesis of fine and commodity chemicals. We report a robust and recyclable single-site cobalt-hydride catalyst based on a porous aluminum metal–organic framework (DUT-5 MOF) for chemoselective hydrogenation of arenes. The DUT-5 node-supported cobalt(II) hydride (DUT-5-CoH) is a versatile solid catalyst for chemoselective hydrogenation of a range of nonpolar and polar arenes, including heteroarenes such as pyridines, quinolines, isoquinolines, indoles, and furans to afford cycloalkanes and saturated heterocycles in excellent yields. DUT-5-CoH exhibited excellent functional group tolerance and could be reusable at least five times without decreased activity. The same MOF-Co catalyst was also efficient for tandem hydrogenation–hydrodeoxygenation of aryl carbonyl compounds, including biomass-derived platform molecules such as furfural and hydroxymethylfurfural to cycloalkanes. In the case of hydrogenation of cumene, our spectroscopic, kinetic, and density functional theory (DFT) studies suggest the insertion of a trisubstituted alkene intermediate into the Co–H bond occurring in the turnover limiting step. Our work highlights the potential of MOF-supported single-site base–metal catalysts for sustainable and environment-friendly industrial production of chemicals and biofuels.
- Akhtar, Naved,Begum, Wahida,Chauhan, Manav,Manna, Kuntal,Newar, Rajashree,Rawat, Manhar Singh
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supporting information
(2022/01/19)
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- Noble metal nanoparticles stabilized by hyper-cross-linked polystyrene as effective catalysts in hydrogenation of arenes
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This work is addressing the arenes’ hydrogenation—the processes of high importance for petrochemical, chemical and pharmaceutical industries. Noble metal (Pd, Pt, Ru) nanoparticles (NPs) stabilized in hyper-cross-linked polystyrene (HPS) were shown to be active and selective catalysts in hydrogenation of a wide range of arenes (monocyclic, condensed, substituted, etc.) in a batch mode. HPS effectively stabilized metal NPs during hydrogenation in different medium (water, organic solvents) and allowed multiple catalyst reuses.
- Bakhvalova, Elena S.,Bykov, Alexey V.,Demidenko, Galina N.,Kiwi-Minsker, Lioubov,Mikheev, Alexey V.,Nikoshvili, Linda Z.,Pinyukova, Arina O.,Sulman, Mikhail G.
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- Indirect reduction of CO2and recycling of polymers by manganese-catalyzed transfer hydrogenation of amides, carbamates, urea derivatives, and polyurethanes
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The reduction of polar bonds, in particular carbonyl groups, is of fundamental importance in organic chemistry and biology. Herein, we report a manganese pincer complex as a versatile catalyst for the transfer hydrogenation of amides, carbamates, urea derivatives, and even polyurethanes leading to the corresponding alcohols, amines, and methanol as products. Since these compound classes can be prepared using CO2as a C1 building block the reported reaction represents an approach to the indirect reduction of CO2. Notably, these are the first examples on the reduction of carbamates and urea derivatives as well as on the C-N bond cleavage in amides by transfer hydrogenation. The general applicability of this methodology is highlighted by the successful reduction of 12 urea derivatives, 26 carbamates and 11 amides. The corresponding amines, alcohols and methanol were obtained in good to excellent yields up to 97%. Furthermore, polyurethanes were successfully converted which represents a viable strategy towards a circular economy. Based on control experiments and the observed intermediates a feasible mechanism is proposed.
- Liu, Xin,Werner, Thomas
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p. 10590 - 10597
(2021/08/20)
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- A convenient Hofmann reaction of carboxamides and cyclic imides mediated by trihaloisocyanuric acids
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A simple, efficient and pot-economic approach in a single vessel has been developed for conversion of aromatic and aliphatic carboxamides into primary amines with one fewer carbom atom (Hofmann reaction) in 38–89 % yield by reacting with trichloro- or tribromoisocyanuric acid and sodium hydroxide in aqueous acetonitrile. Under the same reaction conditions, cyclic imides gave amino acids (69–83 %). The role of the trihaloisocyanuric acids is the in situ generation of N-haloamides, key-intermediates for the Hofmann reaction. The scalability of the methodology was demonstrated by a multigram-scale transformation of phthalimide into anthranilic acid in 77 % yield.
- Bastos, Gustavo A.,de Mattos, Marcio C.S.
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- Copper(II) complex with oxazoline ligand: Synthesis, structures and catalytic activity for nitro compounds reduction
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The Cu(II) complexes bearing bisoxazolines, tridentate pincer pybox and terpyridine ligands have been synthesized and fully characterized. The molecular structures of copper complexes 1a and 1c were confirmed by single-crystal X-ray diffraction methods. These copper complexes highly catalyzed nitro compounds reduction to aniline and its derivatives in the presence of NaBH4 reducing agent in water solvent. The complex 1e was an efficient catalyst toward nitro compounds reduction with wide functional group substrate scope and aliphatic nitro compounds.
- Du, Jun,Gao, Li-Li,Jia, Wei-Guo,Li, Mei,Zhi, Xue-Ting
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- Synthesis, characterization, and catalytic activity of half-sandwich ruthenium complexes with pyridine/phenylene bridged NHC = E (NHC = N-heterocyclic carbene, E = S, Se) ligands
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Three half-sandwichruthenium(II) complexes with pyridine/phenylene bridged NHC = E (NHC = N-heterocyclic carbene, E = S, Se) ligands [Ru(p-cymene)L](PF6)1–2 (1a–1c, L = ligand) were synthesized and characterized. All ruthenium complexes were fully characterized by 1H and 13C NMR spectra, mass spectrometry, and single-crystalX-ray diffraction methods. Moreover, the half-sandwich ruthenium complexes with NHC = E ligands showed highly catalytic activities towards to the tandem dehydrogenation of ammonia borane (AB) and hydrogenation of R–NO2 to R–NH2 at 353 K in water.
- Jia, Wei-Guo,Du, Teng-Teng,Gao, Li-Li,Du, Jun
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- Amination of aliphatic alcohols with urea catalyzed by ruthenium complexes: effect of supporting ligands
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In the present study, ruthenium-catalyzed amination of alcohols by urea as a convenient ammonia carrier in the presence of free diphosphine ligands has been described. A number of ruthenium-phosphine complexes have been studied among which, [(Cp)RuCl(dppe)] was found as an efficient catalyst for alcohol amination reaction. The crystal structures of two new half-sandwich ruthenium complexes, [(Cp)RuCl(dppe)] and [(C6H6)RuCl2(PHEt2)], were determined by X-ray crystallographic analysis. Also the effect of using different supporting phosphines, ratio of raw materials and reaction temperature on conversion and selectivity was investigated. Under optimum reaction conditions high conversion (98percent) and chemo-selectivity toward secondary amines were obtained.
- Dindar, Sara,Nemati Kharat, Ali
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- Highly efficient one-pot multi-directional selective hydrogenation and N-alkylation catalyzed by Ru/LDH under mild conditions
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Atomic economy, non-toxicity, harmlessness and multidirectional selectivity advocated by green chemistry have increasingly become a hot and difficult research topic. Herein, we present a highly efficient, one-pot tandem and easy-to-operate method through which we could directly produce a broad range of multi-directional selective hydrogenated amines or N-alkyl aliphatic amines using aromatic nitro compounds as raw materials. Ru/LDH with characteristics of layered mesoporous structure, well dispersed small Ru nanoparticles and LDH stabilization to the Ru NPs was employed as the catalyst. It is remarkable that multi-directional superb chemoselectivity to aromatic amines, alicyclic amines as well as N-alkyl aliphatic amines could be achieved with excellent catalytic activity and recyclability by tuning reaction conditions over 5wt%Ru/LDH-2. Additionally, this catalytic system also exhibited attractive activity and multi-directional chemoselectivity in the hydrogenation of quinoline and its derivatives with solvents of different polarity. Chemoselectivity to 5,6,7,8-tetrahydroquinoline derivatives could reach as high as 95.6 %.
- Zhang, Sishi,Xu, Jie,Cheng, Hongmei,Zang, Cuicui,Sun, Bin,Jiang, Heyan,Bian, Fengxia
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supporting information
(2020/03/30)
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- Ni-Catalyzed reductive amination of phenols with ammonia or amines into cyclohexylamines
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Phenol and its derivatives, which naturally occur in lignocellulose, can be considered as a renewable feedstock not only for aromatic, but also for alicyclic compounds, such as primary and N-substituted cyclohexylamines. So far, the latter are mostly produced from non-renewable starting materials like benzene via problematic nitration/reduction or cross-coupling routes. Herein, an efficient reductive amination of phenol with ammonia or amines is demonstrated, for the first time without the need for rare and expensive noble metals and without using any additives. Various supported Ni catalysts were screened and we elucidated the influence of the key parameters, including the acid-base properties of the supporting material. Acquired knowledge was then applied to different phenol-ammonia/amine combinations, resulting in the synthesis of various primary, secondary and tertiary cyclohexylamines in fair to very high yields.
- Cuypers, Thomas,Morias, Thomas,Windels, Simon,Marquez, Carlos,Van Goethem, Cédric,Vankelecom, Ivo,De Vos, Dirk E.
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supporting information
p. 1884 - 1893
(2020/04/07)
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- Ambient-Temperature Synthesis of Primary Amines via Reductive Amination of Carbonyl Compounds
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Efficient synthesis of primary amines via low-temperature reductive amination of carbonyl compounds using NH3 and H2 as the nitrogen and hydrogen resources is highly desired and challenging in the chemistry community. Herein, we employed naturally occurring phytic acid as a renewable precursor to fabricate titanium phosphate (TiP)-supported Ru nanocatalysts with different reduction degrees of RuO2 (Ru/TiP-x, x represents the reduction temperature) by combining ball milling and molten-salt processes. Very interestingly, the obtained Ru/TiP-100 had good catalytic performance for the reductive amination of carbonyl compounds at ambient temperature, resulting from the synergistic cooperation of the support (TiP) and the Ru/RuO2 with a suitable proportion of Ru0 (52%). Various carbonyl compounds could be efficiently converted into the corresponding primary amines with high yields. More importantly, the conversion of other substrates with reducible groups could also be achieved at ambient temperature. Detailed investigations indicated that the partially reduced Ru and the support (TiP) were indispensable. The high activity and selectivity of Ru/TiP-100 catalyst originates from the relatively high acidity and the suitable electron density of metallic Ru0.
- Xie, Chao,Song, Jinliang,Hua, Manli,Hu, Yue,Huang, Xin,Wu, Haoran,Yang, Guanying,Han, Buxing
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p. 7763 - 7772
(2020/08/21)
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- Asymmetric synthesis of primary amines catalyzed by thermotolerant fungal reductive aminases
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Chiral primary amines are important intermediates in the synthesis of pharmaceutical compounds. Fungal reductive aminases (RedAms) are NADPH-dependent dehydrogenases that catalyse reductive amination of a range of ketones with short-chain primary amines supplied in an equimolar ratio to give corresponding secondary amines. Herein we describe structural and biochemical characterisation as well as synthetic applications of two RedAms fromNeosartoryaspp. (NfRedAm andNfisRedAm) that display a distinctive activity amongst fungal RedAms, namely a superior ability to use ammonia as the amine partner. Using these enzymes, we demonstrate the synthesis of a broad range of primary amines, with conversions up to >97% and excellent enantiomeric excess. Temperature dependent studies showed that these homologues also possess greater thermal stability compared to other enzymes within this family. Their synthetic applicability is further demonstrated by the production of several primary and secondary amines with turnover numbers (TN) up to 14 000 as well as continous flow reactions, obtaining chiral amines such as (R)-2-aminohexane in space time yields up to 8.1 g L?1h?1. The remarkable features ofNfRedAmand NfisRedAm highlight their potential for wider synthetic application as well as expanding the biocatalytic toolbox available for chiral amine synthesis.
- Cosgrove, Sebastian C.,Grogan, Gideon,Mangas-Sanchez, Juan,Marshall, James R.,Palmer, Ryan B.,Ramsden, Jeremy I.,Sharma, Mahima,Thorpe, Thomas W.,Turner, Nicholas J.
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p. 5052 - 5057
(2020/06/09)
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- General and selective synthesis of primary amines using Ni-based homogeneous catalysts
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The development of base metal catalysts for industrially relevant amination and hydrogenation reactions by applying abundant and atom economical reagents continues to be important for the cost-effective and sustainable synthesis of amines which represent highly essential chemicals. In particular, the synthesis of primary amines is of central importance because these compounds serve as key precursors and central intermediates to produce value-added fine and bulk chemicals as well as pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals and materials. Here we report a Ni-triphos complex as the first Ni-based homogeneous catalyst for both reductive amination of carbonyl compounds with ammonia and hydrogenation of nitroarenes to prepare all kinds of primary amines. Remarkably, this Ni-complex enabled the synthesis of functionalized and structurally diverse benzylic, heterocyclic and aliphatic linear and branched primary amines as well as aromatic primary amines starting from inexpensive and easily accessible carbonyl compounds (aldehydes and ketones) and nitroarenes using ammonia and molecular hydrogen. This Ni-catalyzed reductive amination methodology has been applied for the amination of more complex pharmaceuticals and steroid derivatives. Detailed DFT computations have been performed for the Ni-triphos based reductive amination reaction, and they revealed that the overall reaction has an inner-sphere mechanism with H2metathesis as the rate-determining step.
- Beller, Matthias,Chandrashekhar, Vishwas G.,Jagadeesh, Rajenahally V.,Jiao, Haijun,Murugesan, Kathiravan,Wei, Zhihong
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p. 4332 - 4339
(2020/05/18)
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- Preparation method of cyclohexanone-oxime
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The invention relates to a preparation method of cyclohexanone-oxime, which mainly comprises the following steps: (1) oxidizing cyclohexane and molecular oxygen under the action of a solid catalyst, carrying out one-step reaction to generate KA oil, and performing separation to obtain the KA oil; (2) directly aminating the KA oil with ammonia and hydrogen under the action of a solid catalyst to generate cyclohexylamine and a small amount of byproduct-A, and performing separation to obtain cyclohexylamine; (3) carrying out partial oxidation on cyclohexylamine and molecular oxygen under the action of a solid catalyst to obtain an oxidation product mainly composed of cyclohexanone-oxime, a small amount of byproduct-B and cyclohexylamine which may not be completely converted; and (4) aminatingthe oxidation product, namely, directly carrying out amination reaction on the oxidation product obtained in the step (3), ammonia and hydrogen under the action of a solid catalyst without separation, converting the byproduct-B into cyclohexylamine, and performing separation to obtain cyclohexanone-oxime. The method is short in technological process, small in occupied area and investment, low incost and environmentally friendly.
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Paragraph 0036
(2020/06/05)
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- Facile synthesis of controllable graphene-co-shelled reusable Ni/NiO nanoparticles and their application in the synthesis of amines under mild conditions
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The primary objective of many researchers in chemical synthesis is the development of recyclable and easily accessible catalysts. These catalysts should preferably be made from Earth-abundant metals and have the ability to be utilised in the synthesis of pharmaceutically important compounds. Amines are classified as privileged compounds, and are used extensively in the fine and bulk chemical industries, as well as in pharmaceutical and materials research. In many laboratories and in industry, transition metal catalysed reductive amination of carbonyl compounds is performed using predominantly ammonia and H2. However, these reactions usually require precious metal-based catalysts or RANEY nickel, and require harsh reaction conditions and yield low selectivity for the desired products. Herein, we describe a simple and environmentally friendly method for the preparation of thin graphene spheres that encapsulate uniform Ni/NiO nanoalloy catalysts (Ni/NiO?C) using nickel citrate as the precursor. The resulting catalysts are stable and reusable and were successfully used for the synthesis of primary, secondary, tertiary, and N-methylamines (more than 62 examples). The reaction couples easily accessible carbonyl compounds (aldehydes and ketones) with ammonia, amines, and H2 under very mild industrially viable and scalable conditions (80 °C and 1 MPa H2 pressure, 4 h), offering cost-effective access to numerous functionalized, structurally diverse linear and branched benzylic, heterocyclic, and aliphatic amines including drugs and steroid derivatives. We have also demonstrated the scale-up of the heterogeneous amination protocol to gram-scale synthesis. Furthermore, the catalyst can be immobilized on a magnetic stirring bar and be conveniently recycled up to five times without any significant loss of catalytic activity and selectivity for the product.
- Cui, Zhibing,Liu, Jianguo,Liu, Qiying,Ma, Longlong,Singh, Thishana,Wang, Chenguang,Wang, Nan,Zhu, Yuting
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supporting information
p. 7387 - 7397
(2020/11/19)
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- Anti-Markovnikov Hydroamination of Alkenes with Aqueous Ammonia by Metal-Loaded Titanium Oxide Photocatalyst
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A completely new route was established to synthesize valuable primary amines from alkenes by using aqueous ammonia, that is, a simple photocatalytic hydroamination of alkenes using aqueous ammonia with a metal-loaded TiO2 photocatalyst. Although the photochemical hydroamination prefers to form amines according to the Markovnikov rule, the new photocatalytic hydroamination gives anti-Markovnikov products predominantly. With an Au-loaded TiO2 photocatalyst, the amine yield reached up to 93% and the regioselectivity of anti-Markovnikov products was above 98%. The reaction mechanism was proposed for the new photocatalytic hydroamination.
- Park, Soyeong,Jeong, Jaeyoung,Fujita, Ken-Ichi,Yamamoto, Akira,Yoshida, Hisao
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supporting information
p. 12708 - 12714
(2020/08/21)
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- One-pot dual catalysis for the hydrogenation of heteroarenes and arenes
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A simple dinuclear monohydrido bridged ruthenium complex [{(η6-p-cymene)RuCl}2(μ-H-μ-Cl)] acts as an efficient and selective catalyst for the hydrogenation of various heteroarenes and arenes. The nature of the catalytically active species was investigated using a combination of techniques including in situ reaction monitoring, kinetic studies, quantitative poisoning experiments and electron microscopy, evidencing a dual reactivity. The results suggest that the hydrogenation of heteroarenes proceeds via molecular catalysis. In particular, monitoring the reaction progress by NMR spectroscopy indicates that [{(η6-p-cymene)RuCl}2(μ-H-μ-Cl)] is transformed into monomeric ruthenium intermediates, which upon subsequent activation of dihydrogen and hydride transfer accomplish the hydrogenation of heteroarenes under homogeneous conditions. In contrast, carbocyclic aryl motifs are hydrogenated via a heterogeneous pathway, by in situ generated ruthenium nanoparticles. Remarkably, these hydrogenation reactions can be performed using molecular hydrogen under solvent-free conditions or with 1,4-dioxane, and thus give access to a broad range of saturated heterocycles and carbocycles while generating no waste.
- Chatterjee, Basujit,Kalsi, Deepti,Kaithal, Akash,Bordet, Alexis,Leitner, Walter,Gunanathan, Chidambaram
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p. 5163 - 5170
(2020/09/07)
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- A ruthenium and palladium bimetallic system superior to a rhodium co-catalyst for TiO2-photocatalyzed ring hydrogenation of aniline to cyclohexylamine
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Cyclohexylamine (CHA) is used as an important raw material in chemical industries. Since the production of CHA requires a high temperature and excess amounts of hydrogen gas (H2) and ammonia, the development of a simple reaction operated under milder conditions using a safe compound is indispensable for achieving sustainable chemistry. A highly selective ring hydrogenation of aniline (AN) to CHA over a titanium(IV) oxide photocatalyst having a co-catalyst in water at room temperature, in which oxalic acid was used as the hydrogen source in place of H2, is described in this paper. Among TiO2 photocatalysts having co-catalysts, Rh-TiO2 showed high activity for CHA production, while Pd-TiO2 and Ru-TiO2 showed negligible activity. When a bimetallic photocatalyst, Ru/Pd-TiO2, was used, the yield was larger than that when Rh-TiO2 was used. Metal particles loaded on TiO2 were observed by using TEM, and electronic states of Ru and Pd were evaluated by using XPS. Interactions among metal, AN and CHA were investigated through adsorption experiments. Based on the results, active sites for AN hydrogenation are discussed.
- Araki, Sakae,Kominami, Hiroshi,Nakanishi, Kousuke,Tanaka, Atsuhiro
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p. 212 - 217
(2020/06/27)
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- Iridium nanoparticles deposited on hypercrosslinked polystyrene: synthesis and application in the hydrogenation of aromatic compounds
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A novel method for the incorporation of iridium nanoparticles into a hypercrosslinked polystyrene matrix is developed using supercritical CO2 as reaction medium. The composite has regularly distributed iridium nanoparticles with monomodal size of ca 5?nm. The catalyst shows high activity in the hydrogenation of benzene and can be recycled ten times without any decrease in productivity. The catalyst gave a full conversion in the hydrogenation of toluene to methylcyclohexane and fluoro- and chlorobenzene to cyclohexane.
- Lyubimov, Sergey E.,Sokolovskaya, Marina V.,Korlyukov, Alexander A.,Parenago, Oleg P.,Davankov, Vadim A.
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p. 1283 - 1287
(2020/02/15)
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- Ru/g-C3N4as an efficient catalyst for selective hydrogenation of aromatic diamines to alicyclic diamines
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A series of Ru/g-C3N4materials with highly dispersed Ru were firstly prepared by an ultrasonic impregnation method using carbon nitride as a support. The catalysts were characterized by various techniques including BET and elemental analysis, ICP-AES, XPS, XRD, CO2-TPD and TEM. The results demonstrated that Ru/g-C3N4materials with a mesoporous structure and highly dispersed Ru were successfully prepared. The chemo-selective hydrogenation ofp-phenylenediamine (PPDA) to 1,4-cyclohexanediamine (CHDA) over Ru/g-C3N4as a model reaction was investigated in detail. PPDA conversion of 100% with a CHDA selectivity of more than 86% could be achieved under mild conditions. It can be inferred that the carbon nitride support possessed abundant basic sites and the Ru/g-C3N4-Tcatalysts provided suitable basicity for the aromatic ring hydrogenation. Compared to the N-free Ru/C catalyst, the involvement of nitrogen species in Ru/g-C3N4remarkably improved the catalytic performance. In addition, the recyclability of the catalyst demonstrated that the aggregation of Ru nanoparticles was responsible for the decrease of the catalytic activity. Furthermore, this strategy also could be expanded to the selective hydrogenation of other aromatic diamines to alicyclic diamines.
- Cao, Junya,Cao, Yan,Chen, Jiaqiang,Han, Fenggang,He, Peng,Huang, Xiaoyu,Li, Huiquan,Wang, Liguo,Yang, Huanhuan
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p. 16515 - 16525
(2020/05/13)
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- Preparation method of cyclohexanone-oxime
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The invention relates to a preparation method of cyclohexanone-oxime. The method mainly comprises three synthesis steps of catalytic aniline or nitrobenzene hydrogenation, cyclohexylamine oxidation and byproduct amination: (1) carrying out a hydrogenation reaction on aniline or nitrobenzene and hydrogen under the action of a catalyst to generate cyclohexylamine and a small amount of byproduct-A, and separating the byproduct-A and possibly incompletely converted aniline to obtain cyclohexylamine; (2) carrying out an oxidation reaction on the cyclohexylamine obtained in the step (1) and molecular oxygen under the action of a catalyst to obtain an oxidation reaction product mainly composed of cyclohexanone-oxime, a small amount of by-product-B and possibly unconverted cyclohexylamine; and (3)directly carrying out an amination reaction on the oxidation reaction product obtained in the step (2), ammonia and hydrogen under the action of a catalyst without separation, completely converting the byproduct-B into cyclohexylamine, and separating the cyclohexylamine to obtain cyclohexanone-oxime. According to the method, the yield of cyclohexanone-oxime can be remarkably increased, and the energy consumption and the cost of cyclohexanone-oxime production can be remarkably reduced.
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Paragraph 0037
(2020/06/30)
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- Pd/C Catalyzed selective hydrogenation of nitrobenzene to cyclohexanone oxime in the presence of NH2OH·HCl: Influence of the operative variables and insights on the reaction mechanism
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We studied the influence of temperature, solvent, pressure, catalysts type on the selectivity of nitrobenzene hydrogenation to cyclohexanone oxime (COX) in the presence of NH2OH. The best reaction conditions are: pressure 0.8 MPa, temperature 333 K, solvent ethers, and catalyst Pd/C5%. Other hydrogenation metal catalysts did not give comparable results. The amount of Pd/C influences the yield in COX, which rises above to 90 % at the highest load. The reaction profile shows that aniline is the reaction intermediate. Indeed, aniline as a substrate gives COX, though in lower yield than that achieved employing nitrobenzene. The NH2OH parallel hydrogenation to NH4Cl, influences positively the selectivity to COX. It has been observed that COX, cyclohexanone and N-cyclohexylideneaniline are in equilibrium in the reaction solution and all likely derive from nucleophilic substitutions to a common imine intermediate formed on the Pd surface, whose high activity does not need any further metal catalyst.
- Pietrobon, L.,Pontello, R.,Ronchin, L.,Sadraoui, C.,Tosetto, C.,Vavasori, A.
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- Selective hydrogenation of lignin-derived compounds under mild conditions
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A key challenge in the production of lignin-derived chemicals is to reduce the energy intensive processes used in their production. Here, we show that well-defined Rh nanoparticles dispersed in sub-micrometer size carbon hollow spheres, are able to hydrogenate lignin derived products under mild conditions (30 °C, 5 bar H2), in water. The optimum catalyst exhibits excellent selectivity and activity in the conversion of phenol to cyclohexanol and other related substrates including aryl ethers.
- Chen, Lu,Van Muyden, Antoine P.,Cui, Xinjiang,Laurenczy, Gabor,Dyson, Paul J.
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p. 3069 - 3073
(2020/06/17)
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- Cerium-Catalyzed C-H Functionalizations of Alkanes Utilizing Alcohols as Hydrogen Atom Transfer Agents
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Modern photoredox catalysis has traditionally relied upon metal-to-ligand charge-transfer (MLCT) excitation of metal polypyridyl complexes for the utilization of light energy for the activation of organic substrates. Here, we demonstrate the catalytic application of ligand-to-metal charge-transfer (LMCT) excitation of cerium alkoxide complexes for the facile activation of alkanes utilizing abundant and inexpensive cerium trichloride as the catalyst. As demonstrated by cerium-catalyzed C-H amination and the alkylation of hydrocarbons, this reaction manifold has enabled the facile use of abundant alcohols as practical and selective hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) agents via the direct access of energetically challenging alkoxy radicals. Furthermore, the LMCT excitation event has been investigated through a series of spectroscopic experiments, revealing a rapid bond homolysis process and an effective production of alkoxy radicals, collectively ruling out the LMCT/homolysis event as the rate-determining step of this C-H functionalization.
- An, Qing,Chen, Yuegang,Liu, Weimin,Pan, Hui,Wang, Xin,Wang, Ziyu,Zhang, Kaining,Zuo, Zhiwei
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p. 6216 - 6226
(2020/04/27)
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- One-pot reductive amination of carboxylic acids: a sustainable method for primary amine synthesis
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The reductive amination of carboxylic acids is a very green, efficient and sustainable method for the production of (bio-based) amines. However, with current technology, this reaction requires two to three reaction steps. Here, we report the first (heterogeneous) catalytic system for the one-pot reductive amination of carboxylic acids to amines, with solely H2 and NH3 as the reactants. This reaction can be performed with relatively cheap ruthenium-tungsten bimetallic catalysts in the green and benign solvent cyclopentyl methyl ether (CPME). Selectivities of up to 99% for the primary amine could be achieved at high conversions. Additionally, the catalyst is recyclable and tolerant for common impurities such as water and cations (e.g. sodium carboxylate).
- Coeck, Robin,De Vos, Dirk E.
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supporting information
p. 5105 - 5114
(2020/08/25)
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- Modulation of imine chemistry with intramolecular hydrogen bonding: Effects from ortho-OH to NH
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Salicylaldehyde derivatives and their imines are important building blocks in organic and supramolecular chemistry. In an effort to expand structural diversity in the current work we changed ortho-OH in salicylaldehyde to NH of amide/sulfonamide and investigated the effect of resulting intramolecular hydrogen bonds on imine dynamic covalent chemistry (DCC). A suite of ortho-aminobenzaldehydes were readily synthesized, and X-ray and NMR data validated the existence of NH?O intramolecular hydrogen bonds. The formation and exchange of imines were then studied in acetonitrile, and the acidity of OH/NH significantly influenced the thermodynamics and kinetics of imine reactions. Furthermore, the role of OH/NH?N hydrogen bonds on imines was elucidated by the shift of aldehyde exchange equilibrium. Finally, the formation of imines was achieved in aqueous solutions. The mechanistic insights could pave the way for future applications in assembly and labelling.
- Chen, Hang,Feng, Zelin,Jia, Shuaipeng,You, Lei
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supporting information
(2020/03/24)
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- Mild deprotection of the: N-tert -butyloxycarbonyl (N -Boc) group using oxalyl chloride
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We report a mild method for the selective deprotection of the N-Boc group from a structurally diverse set of compounds, encompassing aliphatic, aromatic, and heterocyclic substrates by using oxalyl chloride in methanol. The reactions take place under room temperature conditions for 1-4 h with yields up to 90percent. This mild procedure was applied to a hybrid, medicinally active compound FC1, which is a novel dual inhibitor of IDO1 and DNA Pol gamma. A broader mechanism involving the electrophilic character of oxalyl chloride is postulated for this deprotection strategy. This journal is
- Awuah, Samuel G.,George, Nathaniel,Ofori, Samuel,Parkin, Sean
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p. 24017 - 24026
(2020/07/23)
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- Essential role of heterocyclic structure of N-alkylated 2-pyrrolidone derivatives for recycling uranium from spent nuclear fuels
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In a simple and versatile reprocessing method for recycling U and Pu from spent nuclear fuels, cyclic amides like Nalkylated 2-pyrrolidone derivatives (NRPs) are exclusively employed. However, there has been no convincing rational to explain why such a heterocyclic structure is required. To answer this question, we employed N-cyclohexyl-2-pyrrolidone (NCP) and N-cyclohexylformamide (NCF) as cyclic and acyclic monodentate amides, and focused on the following 3 topics in this study; (1) structural chemistry of their uranyl dinitrato complexes, (2) precipitation behavior of UO22+ from HNO3(aq) by using these amides, and (3) their chemical stability in HNO3(aq) simulating the reprocessing conditions for spent nuclear fuels. Fundamental coordination chemistry of UO2(NO3)2(L)2 (L = NCP, NCF) was found to be common to both L, regardless of the presence or absence of the pyrrolidone ring. Furthermore, both L exhibit comparable capability in precipitation of UO22+ from HNO3(aq). The most critical difference between NCP and NCF was found in their chemical stability in HNO3(aq), where NCF was gradually decomposed through acid-catalyzed hydrolysis, while NCP remained intact for at least 4 h. In conclusion, the pyrrolidone ring of NRPs plays an important role to sterically protect the carbonyl C from nucleophilic hydrolysis which initiates the amide C(=O)N bond cleavage.
- Inoue, Tsubasa,Kazama, Hiroyuki,Takao, Koichiro,Tsushima, Satoru
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p. 846 - 853
(2020/08/28)
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- Hydrogen-Bond Catalysis of Imine Exchange in Dynamic Covalent Systems
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The reversibility of imine bonds has been exploited to great effect in the field of dynamic covalent chemistry, with applications such as preparation of functional systems, dynamic materials, molecular machines, and covalent organic frameworks. However, acid catalysis is commonly needed for efficient equilibration of imine mixtures. Herein, it is demonstrated that hydrogen bond donors such as thioureas and squaramides can catalyze the equilibration of dynamic imine systems under unprecedentedly mild conditions. Catalysis occurs in a range of solvents and in the presence of many sensitive additives, showing moderate to good rate accelerations for both imine metathesis and transimination with amines, hydrazines, and hydroxylamines. Furthermore, the catalyst proved simple to immobilize, introducing both reusability and extended control of the equilibration process.
- Schaufelberger, Fredrik,Seigel, Karolina,Ramstr?m, Olof
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p. 15581 - 15588
(2020/10/02)
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- Cobalt nanoparticles anchoring on nitrogen doped carbon with excellent performances for transfer hydrogenation of nitrocompounds to primary amines and N-substituted formamides with formic acid
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Cobalt nanoparticles anchoring on nitrogen doped carbon derived from pyrolysis of a cobalt complex and chitosan were developed for reduction of nitrocompounds with neat formic acid to their corresponding amines or N-substituted formamides by switch of solvents. Characterization results revealed that most of the nitrogen atoms are present as graphitic N and pyridinic N as anchoring sites, and the cobalt nanoparticles are wrapped by nitrogen doped carbon layers, endowing the catalyst with excellent activity and superior reusability.
- Zhang, Yuecheng,Cao, Pengwei,Zhang, Hong-Yu,Yin, Guohui,Zhao, Jiquan
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