- The catalytic promiscuity of a microbial 7α-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase. Reduction of non-steroidal carbonyl compounds
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A thermostable 7α-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase from Bacteroides fragilis ATCC 25285 was found to catalyze the reduction of various benzaldehyde analogues to their corresponding benzyl alcohols. The enzyme activity was dependent upon the substituent on the benzene ring of the substrates. Benzaldehydes with electron-withdrawing substituent usually showed higher activity than those with electron-donating groups. Furthermore, this enzyme was tolerant to some organic solvents. These results together with previous studies suggested that 7α-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase from B. fragilis might play multiple functional roles in biosynthesis and metabolism of bile acids, and in the detoxification of xenobiotics containing carbonyl groups in the large intestine. In addition, its broad substrate spectrum offers great potential for finding applications not only in the synthesis of steroidal compounds of pharmaceutical importance, but also for the production of other high-value fine chemicals.
- Liu, Yang,Lv, Tong,Ren, Jie,Wang, Min,Wu, Qiaqing,Zhu, Dunming
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Read Online
- Direct synthesis of iron(0) N-heterocyclic carbene complexes by using Fe3(CO)12 and their application in reduction of carbonyl groups
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Iron Fe(NHC)(CO)4 complexes were formed by direct reaction of Fe3(CO)12 with equimolecular amounts of NHC imidazolium halide precursors; addition of base was not needed in this reaction. When excess (9:1 ratio) 1,3-dimesitylimidazolium chloride is reacted with the iron cluster Fe3(CO)12, a mixture of Fe(IMes)(CO)4 and Fe(IMes)2(CO)3 is obtained. Single crystals of Fe(IMes)(CO)4 and crystals resulting from the cocrystallization of Fe(IMes)(CO)4 and Fe(IMes)2(CO)3 have been studied by X-ray diffraction. These iron(0) complexes were found to catalyze the reduction of benzaldehydes.
- Warratz, Svenja,Postigo, Lorena,Royo, Beatriz
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Read Online
- Manganese-Catalyzed Hydrogenation of Sclareolide to Ambradiol
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The hydrogenation of (+)-Sclareolide to (?)-ambradiol catalyzed by a manganese pincer complex is reported. The hydrogenation reaction is performed with an air- and moisture-stable manganese catalyst and proceeds under relatively mild reaction conditions at low manganese and base loadings. A range of other esters could be successfully hydrogenated leading to the corresponding alcohols in good to quantitative yields using this easy-to-make catalyst. A scale-up experiment was performed leading to 99.3 % of the isolated yield of (?)-Ambradiol.
- Zubar, Viktoriia,Lichtenberger, Niels,Schelwies, Mathias,Oeser, Thomas,Hashmi, A. Stephen K.,Schaub, Thomas
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- A method of synthesis of alcohols
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The present invention belongs to the field of organic synthesis technology, specifically a synthesis method of an alcohol; the present invention is under the catalytic action of tert-butanol lithium, with ester compounds and pinacol borane as raw materials, tetrahydrofuran as a solvent, reacted at 100 ° C for 24h, followed by adding 2mol / LNaOH / MeOH solution, stirred at room temperature overnight to obtain alcohol compounds; the raw materials of the present invention are of extensive sources or easy to prepare, the reaction conditions are relatively mild and do not require a large number of / cumbersome additives, in addition to the tert-butanol lithium catalyst is simple, And the prepared alcohol compounds are of high quality and high separation yield.
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Paragraph 0037-0042
(2022/01/10)
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- A Bifunctional Copper Catalyst Enables Ester Reduction with H2: Expanding the Reactivity Space of Nucleophilic Copper Hydrides
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Employing a bifunctional catalyst based on a copper(I)/NHC complex and a guanidine organocatalyst, catalytic ester reductions to alcohols with H2 as terminal reducing agent are facilitated. The approach taken here enables the simultaneous activation of esters through hydrogen bonding and formation of nucleophilic copper(I) hydrides from H2, resulting in a catalytic hydride transfer to esters. The reduction step is further facilitated by a proton shuttle mediated by the guanidinium subunit. This bifunctional approach to ester reductions for the first time shifts the reactivity of generally considered "soft"copper(I) hydrides to previously unreactive "hard"ester electrophiles and paves the way for a replacement of stoichiometric reducing agents by a catalyst and H2.
- Kaicharla, Trinadh,Ngoc, Trung Tran,Teichert, Johannes F.,Tzaras, Dimitrios-Ioannis,Zimmermann, Birte M.
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p. 16865 - 16873
(2021/10/20)
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- A Water/Toluene Biphasic Medium Improves Yields and Deuterium Incorporation into Alcohols in the Transfer Hydrogenation of Aldehydes
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Deuterium labeling is an interesting process that leads to compounds of use in different fields. We describe the transfer hydrogenation of aldehydes and the selective C1 deuteration of the obtained alcohols in D2O, as the only deuterium source. Different aromatic, alkylic and α,β-unsaturated aldehydes were reduced in the presence of [RuCl(p-cymene)(dmbpy)]BF4, (dmbpy=4,4′-dimethyl-2,2′-bipyridine) as the pre-catalyst and HCO2Na/HCO2H as the hydrogen source. Moreover, furfural and glucose, were selectively reduced to the valuable alcohols, furfuryl alcohol and sorbitol. The processes were carried out in neat water or in a biphasic water/toluene system. The biphasic system allowed easy recycling, higher yields, and higher selective D incorporation (using D2O/toluene). The deuteration took place due to an efficient effective M–H/D+ exchange from D2O that allows the inversion of polarity of D+ (umpolung). DFT calculations that explain the catalytic behavior in water are also included.
- Ruiz-Casta?eda, Margarita,Santos, Lucía,Manzano, Blanca R.,Espino, Gustavo,Jalón, Félix A.
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supporting information
p. 1358 - 1372
(2021/03/16)
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- KB3H8: An environment-friendly reagent for the selective reduction of aldehydes and ketones to alcohols
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Selective reduction of aldehydes and ketones to their corresponding alcohols with KB3H8, an air- and moisture-stable, nontoxic, and easy-to-handle reagent, in water and THF has been explored under an air atmosphere for the first time. Control experiments illustrated the good selectivity of KB3H8 over NaBH4 for the reduction of 4-acetylbenzaldehyde and aromatic keto esters. This journal is
- Li, Xinying,Mi, Tongge,Guo, Wenjing,Ruan, Zhongrui,Guo, Yu,Ma, Yan-Na,Chen, Xuenian
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supporting information
p. 12776 - 12779
(2021/12/10)
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- Application of nitrogen-containing heterocyclic mercaptan cuprous compound in photocatalytic reaction of carbonyl compound
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The invention discloses an application of a nitrogen-containing heterocyclic mercaptan cuprous compound in a photocatalytic reaction of a carbonyl compound, relates to the technical field of application of photocatalysts; in particular, photocatalytic reduction reaction is carried out on the carbonyl compound by adopting the nitrogen-containing heterocyclic mercaptan cuprous compound as a photocatalyst to prepare an alcohol compound. The nitrogen-containing heterocyclic mercaptan cuprous compound is used as the photocatalyst for the photocatalytic reduction reaction of the carbonyl compound, visible light is successfully catalyzed to induce reduction of the carbonyl compound into the alcohol compound, the catalyst is low in price and good in catalytic effect, and the production cost can be reduced.
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Paragraph 0013; 0049-0051
(2021/06/06)
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- Light-driven MPV-type reduction of aryl ketones/aldehydes to alcohols with isopropanol under mild conditions
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Alcohols are versatile structural motifs of pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals and fine chemicals. With respect to green chemistry, the development of more sustainable and cost-efficient processes for converting ketones/aldehydes to alcohols is highly desired. Herein, a direct light-driven strategy for reducing ketones/aldehydes to alcohols using isopropanol as the reducing agent and solvent, in the presence of t-BuOLi, under an air atmosphere at room temperature is developed. This operationally simple light-promoted Meerwein-Ponndorf-Verley (MPV) type reduction can be used to produce various benzylic alcohol derivatives as well as applied to bioactive molecules and PEEK model compounds, demonstrating its application potential.
- Cao, Dawei,Xia, Shumei,Pan, Pan,Zeng, Huiying,Li, Chao-Jun,Peng, Yong
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supporting information
p. 7539 - 7543
(2021/10/12)
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- Ruthenium(II) Complex of a Tridentate Azoaromatic Pincer Ligand and its Use in Catalytic Transfer Hydrogenation of Aldehydes and Ketones with Isopropanol
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In this work, a new Ru(II) complex with the redox-active pincer 2,6-bis(phenylazo)pyridine ligand (L) is reported which acts as a metal-ligand bifunctional catalyst for transfer hydrogenation reactions. The isolated complex [(L)Ru(PMe2Ph)2(CH3CN)](ClO4)2; [1](ClO4)2 is characterized by a host of spectroscopic measurements and X-ray structure determination. It is diamagnetic and single-crystal X-ray structure analysis reveals that [1]2+ adopts a distorted octahedral geometry where L binds Ru center in meridional fashion. The observed elongation in the coordinated azo bond length (1.29 ?) is attributed to the extensive π-back bonding, dπ(RuII)→π*(azo)L. The complex [1](ClO4)2 acts as an efficient catalyst, which brings about catalytic transfer hydrogenation reactions of a broad array of aldehydes and ketones in isopropanol and in inert conditions. The selectivity of the catalyst for aldehyde reduction over the other reducible functional groups such as nitro, nitrile, ester etc was also investigated. Mechanistic studies, examined by suitable control reactions and isotope labelling experiments, indicate synergistic participation of both ligand and metal centres via the formation of a fleeting Ru?H intermediate and hydrogen walking to the coordinated azo function of L.
- Saha, Tanushri,Prasad Rath, Santi,Goswami, Sreebrata
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p. 1455 - 1461
(2021/05/18)
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- Oxoammonium-Mediated Allylsilane–Ether Coupling Reaction
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A new C(sp3)?H functionalization reaction consisting of the oxidative α-allylation of allyl- and benzyl- methyl ethers has been developed. The C?C coupling could be carried out under mild conditions thanks to the use of cheap and green oxoammonium salts. The scope of the reaction was studied over 27 examples, considering the nature of the substituents on the two coupling partners.
- Carlet, Federica,Bertarini, Greta,Broggini, Gianluigi,Pradal, Alexandre,Poli, Giovanni
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supporting information
p. 2162 - 2168
(2021/04/02)
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- NaI-mediated oxidative amidation of benzyl alcohols/aromatic aldehydes to benzamides via electrochemical reaction
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In this research, we have developed a mild electrochemical process for oxidative amidation of benzyl alcohols/aromatic aldehydes with cyclic amines into the corresponding benzamides. This electroorganic synthetic method proceeds using NaI as a redox mediator under ambient temperature in undivided cell, providing more than 25 examples of amide products in moderate to good yields. The benefits of this reaction include one-pot synthesis, open air condition, proceed in aqueous media and no requirement of external conducting salt, base and oxidant.
- Rerkrachaneekorn, Tanawat,Tankam, Theeranon,Sukwattanasinitt, Mongkol,Wacharasindhu, Sumrit
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supporting information
(2021/04/15)
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- Homoleptic cobalt(II) phenoxyimine complexes for hydrosilylation of aldehydes and ketones without base activation of cobalt(II)
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Air-stable, easy to prepare, homoleptic cobalt(II) complexes bearing pendant-modified phenoxyimine ligands were synthesized and determined. The complexes exhibited high catalytic performance for reducing aldehydes and ketones via catalytic hydrosilylation, where a hydrosilane and a catalytic amount of the cobalt(II) complex were added under base-free conditions. The reaction proceeded even in the presence of excess water, and excellent functional-group tolerance was observed. Subsequent hydrolysis gave the alcohol in high yields. Moreover, H2O had a critical role in activation of the Co(II) catalyst with hydrosilane. Several additional results also indicated that the cobalt(II) center acts as an active catalyst in the hydrosilylation of aldehydes and ketones.
- Hori, Momoko,Ishikawa, Ryuta,Koga, Yuji,Matsubara, Kouki,Mitsuyama, Tomoaki,Shin, Sayaka
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p. 1379 - 1387
(2021/05/29)
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- Mild oxidation of benzyl alcohols to benzyl aldehydes or ketones catalyzed by visible light
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Induced by visible light, mild oxidation condition to prepare benzyl aldehydes or ketones have been developed by using bromotrichloromethane as photochemical oxidant. This method avoids high temperature, pressure and peroxidation with only visible light as the green driving force.
- Cheng, Dongping,Li, Xiaonian,Ren, Shujian,Xu, Xiaoliang
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supporting information
(2021/07/02)
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- Selective, base-free hydrogenation of aldehydes catalyzed by IR complexes based on proton-responsive lutidine-derived CNP ligands
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Metal catalysts based on ligands containing proton-responsive sites have found widespread applications in the hydrogenation of polar unsaturated substrates. In this contribution, Ir complexes incorporating lutidine-derived CNP (C = N-heterocyclic carbene, NHC; P = phosphine) pincer ligands with two nonequivalent Br?nsted acid/base sites have been examined in the hydrogenation of aldehydes. To this end, Ir(CNP)H2Cl complexes were synthesized in two steps from the CNP ligand precursors and Ir(acac)(COD). These derivatives react with an excess of NaH to yield the trihydride derivatives Ir(CNP)H3, which were assessed as catalyst precursors in the hydrogenation of a series of aldehydes. The catalytic reactions were performed using commercial-grade substrates under neutral, mild conditions (0.1 mol % Ir-CNP; 4 bar H2, room temperature) with high conversions and selectivities for the reduction of the carbonyl function in the presence of other readily reducible groups such as C=C, nitro, and halogens. Reaction of an Ir(CNP)H2Cl complex with base in the presence of an aromatic aldehyde produces the reversible formation of alkoxide Ir complexes in which the aldehyde is bound to the deprotonated pincer framework (CNP*) through the CH-NHC arm of the ligand. These species, along with a carboxylate complex resulting from the Ir mediated oxidation of the aldehyde by water, is observed in the reaction of Ir(CNP)H3 with benzaldehyde. Finally, investigation of the mechanism of the hydrogenation of aldehydes has been carried out by means of DFT calculations considering the involvement of each arm of the Ir-CNP/CNP* derivatives. Calculations support a mechanism in which the catalyst switches its metal?ligand cooperation sites to follow the lowest energy pathway for each step of the catalytic cycle.
- álvarez, Eleuterio,Hernández-Juárez, Martín,López-Serrano, Joaquín,Paneque, Margarita,Rendón, Nuria,Sánchez, Práxedes,Suárez, Andrés
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p. 1314 - 1327
(2021/05/31)
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- Incorporation of [Cp*Rh] and [Cp*Ir] Species into Heterobimetallic Complexes via Protonolysis Reactivity and Dioximato Chelation
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The synthesis of multimetallic compounds can enable the placement of two or more metals in close proximity, but efforts in this area are often hindered by reagent incompatibilities and a lack of selectivity. Here, we show that organometallic half-sandwich [Cp*M] (M = Rh, Ir) fragments (where Cp? is η5-pentamethylcyclopentadienyl) can be cleanly installed into metallomacrocyclic structures based on the workhorse diimine-monooxime-monooximato ligand system. Six new heterobimetallic compounds have been prepared to explore this synthetic chemistry, which relies on in situ protonolysis reactivity with precursor Ni(II) or Co(III) monometallic complexes in the presence of suitable [Cp*M] species. Solid-state X-ray diffraction studies confirm installation of the [Cp*M] fragments into the metallomacrocycles via effective chelation of the Rh(III) and Ir(III) centers by the nascent dioximato site. Contrasting with square-planar Ni(II) centers, the Co(III) centers prefer octahedral geometry in the heterobimetallic compounds, promoting bridging ligation of acetate across the two metals. Spectroscopic and electrochemical studies reveal subtle influences of the metals on each other's properties, consistent with the moderate M′···M distances of ca. 3.6-3.7 ? in the modular compounds. Taken together, our results show that heterobimetallic complexes can be assembled with organometallic [Cp*M] fragments on the diimine-dioximato platform.
- Kumar, Amit,Comadoll, Chelsea G.,King, Daniel S.,Oliver, Allen G.,Day, Victor W.,Blakemore, James D.
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supporting information
p. 14047 - 14059
(2021/09/11)
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- Synthesis and Catalytic Activity of Atrane-type Hard and Soft Lewis Superacids with a Silyl, Germyl, or Stannyl Cationic Center
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The synthesis and isolation of atrane-type molecules 1E+ (E=Si, Ge, or Sn) having a cationic group 14 elemental center are reported. The cations 1E+ act as hard and soft Lewis superacids, which readily interact with various hard and soft Lewis basic substrates. The rigid atrane framework stabilizes the localized positive charge on the elemental center and assists the formation of the well-defined highly coordinated states of 1E+. The cations were applied to the hydrodefluorination, Friedel-Crafts reaction, alkyne cyclization, and carbonyl reduction as Lewis acid catalysts. Most notably, [1Si][ClO4] exhibits unique chemoselectivity that depends on a solvent in the competitive reaction of silyl enol ether with a mixture of benzaldehyde dimethyl acetal and benzaldehyde. Our findings indicate the potential of hard and soft Lewis superacids in organic synthesis.
- Tanaka, Daiki,Konishi, Akihito,Yasuda, Makoto
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supporting information
p. 3118 - 3123
(2021/09/08)
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- Hydrosilylation of Aldehydes and Ketones Catalyzed by a 2-Iminopyrrolyl Alkyl-Manganese(II) Complex
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A well-defined and very active single-component manganese(II) catalyst system for the hydrosilylation of aldehydes and ketones is presented. First, the reaction of 5-(2,4,6-iPr3C6H2)-2-[N-(2,6-iPr2C6H3)formimino]pyrrolyl potassium (KL) and [MnCl2(Py)2] afforded the binuclear 2-iminopyrrolyl manganese(II) pyridine chloride complex [Mn2{κ2N,N′-5-(2,4,6-iPr3C6H2)-NC4H2-2-C(H)═N(2,6-iPr2C6H3)}2(Py)2(μ-Cl)2] 1. Subsequently, the alkylation reaction of complex 1 with LiCH2SiMe3 afforded the respective (trimethylsilyl)methyl-Mn(II) complex [Mn{κ2N,N′-5-(2,4,6-iPr3C6H2)-NC4H2-2-C(H)═N(2,6-iPr2C6H3)}(Py)CH2SiMe3] 2 in a good yield. Complexes 1 and 2 were characterized by elemental analysis, 1H NMR spectroscopy, Evans' method, FTIR spectroscopy, and single-crystal X-ray diffraction. While the crystal structure of complex 1 has been identified as a binuclear entity, in which the Mn(II) centers present pentacoordinate coordination spheres, that of complex 2 corresponds to a monomer with a distorted tetrahedral coordination geometry. Complex 2 proved to be a very active precatalyst for the atom-economic hydrosilylation of several aldehydes and ketones under very mild conditions, with a maximum turnover frequency of 95 min-1, via a silyl-Mn(II) mechanistic route, as asserted by a combination of experimental and theoretical efforts, the respective silanes were cleanly converted to the respective alcoholic products in high yields.
- Cruz, Tiago F. C.,Gomes, Pedro T.,Veiros, Luís F.
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- La(CH2C6H4NMe2-o)3-catalyzed reduction of esters to alcohols with pinacolborane
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Catalytic reduction of esters is a favourable synthetic strategy to obtain the corresponding alcohols. La(CH2C6H4NMe2-o)3, a simple and facilely accessible lanthanide complex, can serve as a highly efficient catalyst for the reduction of esters with pinacolborane (HBpin), selectively affording alcohols in good yields under mild conditions. This protocol exhibits good tolerance for many functional groups such as C-C double bond, nitro, halogen, furyl, and thienyl groups. A lanthanum hydride species like [La]-H·HBpin is supposed to play a crucial role in promoting the interaction of esters with HBpin.
- Gong, Mingliang,Luo, Yunjie,Xie, Hongzhen,Zhang, Fangcao
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supporting information
p. 17654 - 17659
(2021/10/04)
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- Deoxygenative hydroboration of primary, secondary, and tertiary amides: Catalyst-free synthesis of various substituted amines
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Transformation of relatively less reactive functional groups under catalyst-free conditions is an interesting aspect and requires a typical protocol. Herein, we report the synthesis of various primary, secondary, and tertiary amines through hydroboration of amides using pinacolborane under catalyst-free and solvent-free conditions. The deoxygenative hydroboration of primary and secondary amides proceeded with excellent conversions. The comparatively less reactive tertiary amides were also converted to the corresponding N,N-diamines in moderate yields under catalyst-free conditions, although alcohols were obtained as a minor product.
- An, Duk Keun,Jaladi, Ashok Kumar,Kim, Hyun Tae,Yi, Jaeeun
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- Continuous-Flow Amide and Ester Reductions Using Neat Borane Dimethylsulfide Complex
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Reductions of amides and esters are of critical importance in synthetic chemistry, and there are numerous protocols for executing these transformations employing traditional batch conditions. Notably, strategies based on flow chemistry, especially for amide reductions, are much less explored. Herein, a simple process was developed in which neat borane dimethylsulfide complex (BH3?DMS) was used to reduce various esters and amides under continuous-flow conditions. Taking advantage of the solvent-free nature of the commercially available borane reagent, high substrate concentrations were realized, allowing outstanding productivity and a significant reduction in E-factors. In addition, with carefully optimized short residence times, the corresponding alcohols and amines were obtained in high selectivity and high yields. The synthetic utility of the inexpensive and easily implemented flow protocol was further corroborated by multigram-scale syntheses of pharmaceutically relevant products. Owing to its beneficial features, including low solvent and reducing agent consumption, high selectivity, simplicity, and inherent scalability, the present process demonstrates fewer environmental concerns than most typical batch reductions using metal hydrides as reducing agents.
- ?tv?s, Sándor B.,Kappe, C. Oliver
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p. 1800 - 1807
(2020/02/27)
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- Bench-Stable Manganese NHC Complexes for the Selective Reduction of Esters to Alcohols with Silanes
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Selective reduction of esters to alcohols was accomplished through Mn(I)-mediated hydrosilylation reaction. The manganese tricarbonyl complex [Mn(bis-NHC)(CO)3Br] resulted an active pre-catalyst for the reduction of a variety of esters using phenylsilane and the cheap and readily available polymethylhydrosiloxane. An in situ examination of the catalytic reaction using 55Mn NMR spectroscopy allowed us to detect the formation of Mn(I) intermediate active species. (Figure presented.).
- Sousa, Sara C. A.,Realista, Sara,Royo, Beatriz
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p. 2437 - 2443
(2020/04/30)
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- Synthesis and structure activity relationships of cyanopyridone based anti-tuberculosis agents
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Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of tuberculosis, relies on thymidylate kinase (MtbTMPK) for the synthesis of thymidine triphosphates and thus also DNA synthesis. Therefore, this enzyme constitutes a potential Achilles heel of the pathogen. Based on a previously reported MtbTMPK 6-aryl-substituted pyridone inhibitor and guided by two co-crystal structures of MtbTMPK with pyridone- and thymine-based inhibitors, we report the synthesis of a series of aryl-shifted cyanopyridone analogues. These compounds generally lacked significant MtbTMPK inhibitory potency, but some analogues did exhibit promising antitubercular activity. Analogue 11i demonstrated a 10-fold increased antitubercular activity (MIC H37Rv, 1.2 μM) compared to literature compound 5. Many analogues with whole-cell antimycobacterial activity were devoid of significant cytotoxicity.
- Boshoff, Helena I. M.,Caljon, Guy,Forbes, He Eun,Hulpia, Fabian,Jian, Yanlin,Munier-Lehmann, Héle?ne,Risseeuw, Martijn D. P.,Van Calenbergh, Serge
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- Diethylsilane as a Powerful Reagent in Au Nanoparticle-Catalyzed Reductive Transformations
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Diethylsilane (Et2SiH2), a simple and readily available dihydrosilane, that exhibits superior reactivity, as compared to monohydrosilanes, in a series of reductive transformations catalyzed by recyclable and reusable Au nanoparticles (1 mol-%) supported on TiO2. It reduces aldehydes or ketones almost instantaneously at ambient conditions. It can be used in a one pot rapid reductive amination procedure, in which premixing of aldehyde and amine is required prior to the addition of the reducing agent and the catalyst, even in a protic solvent. An unprecedented method for the synthesis of N-arylisoindolines is also shown in the reductive amination between o-phthalaldehyde and anilines. In this transformation, it is proposed that the intermediate N,2-diphenylisoindolin-1-imines are reduced stepwise to the isoindolines. Finally, Et2SiH2 readily reduces amides into amines in excellent yields and shorter reaction times relative to previously known analogous nano Au(0)-catalyzed protocols.
- Louka, Anastasia,Kidonakis, Marios,Saridakis, Iakovos,Zantioti-Chatzouda, Elisavet-Maria,Stratakis, Manolis
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p. 3508 - 3514
(2020/06/02)
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- Triazole derivative as well as preparation method and application thereof
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The invention relates to a triazole derivative as well as a preparation method and application thereof, which belong to the technical field of organic synthetic drugs. The structure of the triazole derivative is shown as a formula I. In the formula I, R1 and R2 are H, Cl, Br,-CF3,-CH(CH3)2 or -OCH3, and R1 and R2 are not H at the same time. R3 is -CH2 or -COCH2; X and Y are N or C, X and Y are not C at the same time, and X and Y are not N at the same time. The triazole derivative disclosed by the invention has a certain inhibition effect on germs of various crop diseases. Small toxic andside effects on plants are achieved. The preparation method of the triazole derivative is simple.
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Sheet 0053; 0060-0062
(2020/06/09)
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- Chemoselective transfer hydrogenation of aromatic and heterocyclic aldehydes by green chemically prepared cobalt oxide nanoparticles
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A new surfactant (quercetin) assisted hydrothermal method is used for the preparation of phase pure cobalt oxide (Co3O4) nanoparticles (Nps). The quercetin acted well as surfactant in producing size controlled Nps. The produced Nps were extensively characterized by various techniques to reveal its chemical composition, structure, morphology, size and thermal behavior. The main objective of the study is to employ the prepared material as heterogeneous catalyst for hydrogenation of therapeutically important aldehydes. The capability of the catalyst is appear to be good, since the yield of alcohols from structurally different aldehydes is adequate with short period of time. Also the catalyst is recyclable, stable, no need of addition of ligands for activation and environmentally benign.
- Krishnaveni,Lakshmi,Kaveri,Kadirvelu
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- Transfer hydrogenation of aldehydes and ketones catalyzed using an aminophosphinite POCNHpincer complex of Ni(ii)
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The aminophosphinite pincer complex (POCNH)NiBr was found to effectively catalyze the transfer hydrogenation of aldehydes and ketones with 2-propanol and KOtBu as a base, presenting a rare example of bifunctional nickel transfer hydrogenation catalysts. The transfer hydrogenation of aldehydes and ketones was found to be selective, tolerating a wide range of other functional groups, including those prone to reduction, such as esters, amides, alkenes, pyridines, and nitriles. The reactions were suggested to proceedviathe metal-ligand cooperative mechanism with an intermediacy of an amido (POCN)NiIIspecies.
- ?ztop?u, ?zgür,Hayrapetyan, Davit,Khalimon, Andrey Y.,Lyssenko, Konstantin A.,Segizbayev, Medet,Shakhman, Dinmukhamed
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supporting information
p. 11950 - 11957
(2020/09/21)
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- 1-D manganese(ii)-terpyridine coordination polymers as precatalysts for hydrofunctionalisation of carbonyl compounds
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Reductive catalysis with earth-abundant metals is currently of increasing importance and shows potential in replacing precious metal catalysis. In this work, we revealed catalytic hydroboration and hydrosilylation of ketones and aldehydes achieved by a structurally defined manganese(ii) coordination polymer (CP) as a precatalyst under mild conditions. The manganese-catalysed methodology can be applied to a range of functionalized aldehydes and ketones with turnover numbers (TON) of up to 990. Preliminary results on the regioselective catalytic hydrofunctionalization of styrenes by the Mn-CP catalyst are also presented.
- Johnson, Jahvon,Li, Sihan,Mo, Zixuan,Neary, Michelle C.,Zeng, Haisu,Zhang, Guoqi,Zheng, Shengping
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p. 2610 - 2615
(2020/03/05)
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- Catalytic Activity of a Zr MOF Containing POCOP-Pd Pincer Complexes
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A metal-organic framework assembled from POCOP-Pd pincer complex metallolinkers (1-PdBF4, Zr6O4(OH)4(L-PdMeCN)3(BF4)3, L = (2,6-(OPAr2)2C6H3, Ar = p-C6H4CO2-) has been generated via postsynthetic oxidative I-/BF4- ligand exchange with NOBF4. 1-PdBF4 catalyzes a range of organic transformations, including transfer hydrogenation of unsaturated organic substrates, terminal alkyne hydration, and intramolecular hydroarylation of alkynes. The homogeneous analogue, tBu4POCOP-PdBF4, shows poor catalytic activity for transfer hydrogenation and alkyne hydration and decomposes under the catalytic reaction conditions. Solubility limitations and catalyst deactivation pathways observed for the homogeneous pincer complex propound the advantages of using porous solid supports to immobilize organometallic species.
- Kassie, Abebu A.,Wade, Casey R.
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p. 2214 - 2221
(2020/07/06)
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- A Hammett Study of Clostridium acetobutylicum Alcohol Dehydrogenase (CaADH): An Enzyme with Remarkable Substrate Promiscuity and Utility for Organic Synthesis
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Described is a physical organic study of the reduction of three sets of carbonyl compounds by the NADPH-dependent enzyme Clostridium acetobutylicum alcohol dehydrogenase (CaADH). Previous studies in our group have shown this enzyme to display broad substrate promiscuity, yet remarkable stereochemical fidelity, in the reduction of carbonyl compounds, including α-, β- and γ-keto esters (d -stereochemistry), as well as α,α-difluorinated-β-keto phosphonate esters (l -stereochemistry). To better mechanistically characterize this promising dehydrogenase enzyme, we report here the results of a Hammett linear free-energy relationship (LFER) study across three distinct classes of carbonyl substrates; namely aryl aldehydes, aryl β-keto esters and aryl trifluoromethyl ketones. Rates are measured by monitoring the decrease in NADPH fluorescence at 460 nm with time across a range of substrate concentrations for each member of each carbonyl compound class. The resulting v 0 versus [S] data are subjected to least-squares hyperbolic fitting to the Michaelis-Menton equation. Hammett plots of log(V max) versus σ X yield the following Hammett parameters: (i) for p -substituted aldehydes, ρ = 0.99 ± 0.10, ρ = 0.40 ± 0.09; two domains observed, (ii) for p -substituted β-keto esters ρ = 1.02 ± 0.31, and (iii) for p -substituted aryl trifluoromethyl ketones ρ = -0.97 ± 0.12. The positive sign of ρ indicated for the first two compound classes suggests that the hydride transfer from the nicotinamide cofactor is at least partially rate-limiting, whereas the negative sign of ρ for the aryl trifluoromethyl ketone class suggests that dehydration of the ketone hydrate may be rate-limiting for this compound class. Consistent with this notion, examination of the 13 C NMR spectra for the set of p -substituted aryl trifluo romethyl ketones in 2percent aqueous DMSO reveals significant formation of the hydrate (gem -diol) for this compound family, with compounds bearing the more electron-withdrawing groups showing greater degrees of hydration. This work also presents the first examples of the CaADH-mediated reduction of aryl trifluoromethyl ketones, and chiral HPLC analysis indicates that the parent compound α,α,α-trifluoroacetophenone is enzymatically reduced in 99percent ee and 95percent yield, providing the (S)-stereoisomer, suggesting yet another compound class for which this enzyme displays high enantioselectivity.
- Berkowitz, David B.,Kudalkar, Gaurav P.,Lee, Joshua D.,Tiwari, Virendra K.
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supporting information
p. 237 - 247
(2020/02/18)
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- O-functionalised NHC ligands for efficient nickel-catalysed c-o hydrosilylation
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A series of C,O-bidentate chelating mesoionic carbene nickel(ii) complexes [Ni(NHC^PhO)2] (NHC = imidazolylidene or triazolylidene) were applied for hydrosilylation of carbonyl groups. The catalytic system is selective towards aldehyde reduction and tolerant to electron-donating and -withdrawing group substituents. Stoichiometric experiments in the presence of different silanes lends support to a metal-ligand cooperative activation of the Si-H bond. Catalytic performance of the nickel complexes is dependent on the triazolylidene substituents. Butyl-substituted triazolylidene ligands impart turnover numbers up to 7,400 and turnover frequencies of almost 30,000 h-1, identifying this complex as one of the best-performing nickel catalysts for hydrosilylation and demonstrating the outstanding potential of O-functionalised NHC ligands in combination with first-row transition metals.
- Albrecht, Martin,Bertini, Simone
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p. 483 - 488
(2020/09/09)
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- Erratum: Redox-Noninnocent Ligand-Supported Vanadium Catalysts for the Chemoselective Reduction of C=X (X = O, N) Functionalities (Journal of the American Chemical Society (2019) 141:38 (15230-15239) DOI: 10.1021/jacs.9b07062)
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Pages 15232, 15233, and 15236. In the original paper, the doublet wave functions for 21 and 21a/21b were incorrectly (Figure Presented). reported as spin-contaminated in sections 2.3 and 2.8 (Figure 3 and Scheme 9, respectively.) This comes from the incorrectly reported expected eigenvalue of 0.75 for the spin-squared operator ??2? for the antiferromagnetically coupled doublet |↓?L|↑↑?V state (originally given in the Supporting Information). The correct expected eigenvalue for the |↓?L|↑↑?V state should be 1.75. The wave functions for 21 and 21a/21b (eigenvalues 1.79 and 1.77/1.66, respectively) are therefore not spincontaminated. The corrected Figure 3 and Scheme 9 are presented below. A corrected Supporting Information file is also provided. The corrections do not affect any of the conclusions of the Article, but slightly decrease the gap between the quartet and doublet spin surfaces. Scheme 3 has been also corrected to reflect the fact that (CH3)3SiCH2 ? radicals can only react based on spin conservation.
- Zhang, Guoqi,Wu, Jing,Zheng, Shengping,Neary, Michelle C.,Mao, Jincheng,Flores, Marco,Trovitch, Ryan J.,Dub, Pavel A.
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p. 16507 - 16509
(2020/10/14)
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- Cerium(IV) Carboxylate Photocatalyst for Catalytic Radical Formation from Carboxylic Acids: Decarboxylative Oxygenation of Aliphatic Carboxylic Acids and Lactonization of Aromatic Carboxylic Acids
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We found that in situ generated cerium(IV) carboxylate generated by mixing the precursor Ce(OtBu)4 with the corresponding carboxylic acids served as efficient photocatalysts for the direct formation of carboxyl radicals from carboxylic acids under blue light-emitting diodes (blue LEDs) irradiation and air, resulting in catalytic decarboxylative oxygenation of aliphatic carboxylic acids to give C-O bond-forming products such as aldehydes and ketones. Control experiments revealed that hexanuclear Ce(IV) carboxylate clusters initially formed in the reaction mixture and the ligand-to-metal charge transfer nature of the Ce(IV) carboxylate clusters was responsible for the high catalytic performance to transform the carboxylate ligands to the carboxyl radical. In addition, the Ce(IV) carboxylate cluster catalyzed direct lactonization of 2-isopropylbenzoic acid to produce the corresponding peroxy lactone and ?3-lactone via intramolecular 1,5-hydrogen atom transfer (1,5-HAT).
- Hirosawa, Keishi,Mashima, Kazushi,Satoh, Tetsuya,Shinohara, Koichi,Shirase, Satoru,Tamaki, Sota,Tsurugi, Hayato
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supporting information
(2020/03/25)
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- Selective hydrogenation of primary amides and cyclic di-peptides under Ru-catalysis
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A ruthenium(II)-catalyzed selective hydrogenation of challenging primary amides and cyclic di-peptides to their corresponding primary alcohols and amino alcohols, respectively, is reported. The hydrogenation reaction operates under mild and eco-benign conditions and can be scaled-up.
- Subaramanian, Murugan,Sivakumar, Ganesan,Babu, Jessin K.,Balaraman, Ekambaram
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supporting information
p. 12411 - 12414
(2020/10/30)
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- Novel clamp metal complex and application thereof
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The invention discloses a method for preparing a novel clamp-shaped complex and application of the novel clamp-shaped complex in the reaction of catalytic hydrogenation of carboxylic acid ester compounds to produce corresponding alcohols and reaction of carbon dioxide catalytic hydrogenation to form formamide compounds. Carboxylic acid esters and hydrogen as raw materials or carbon dioxide, hydrogen and amine compounds as raw materials are reacted in an organic solvent condition or a solvent-free condition in the presence of a transition metal complex as a catalyst to respectively form the corresponding alcohol compounds and/or corresponding formamide compounds. The method has the advantages of being high in reaction efficiency, good in selectivity, mild in conditions, economical, environmentally-friendly, and simple in operation, and has good promotion and application prospects.
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Paragraph 0410-0412; 0490-0494
(2019/04/26)
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- Iron catalysed selective reduction of esters to alcohols
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The reaction of (dppBIAN)FeCl2 with 3 equivalents of n-BuLi affords a catalytically active anionic Fe complex; the nature of the anionic complex was probed using EPR and IR experiments and is proposed to involve a dearomatized, radical, ligand scaffold. This complex is an active catalyst for the hydrosilylation of esters to afford alcohols; loadings as low as 1 mol% were employed.
- Tamang, Sem Raj,Cozzolino, Anthony F.,Findlater, Michael
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supporting information
p. 1834 - 1838
(2019/02/20)
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- Interconverting Lanthanum Hydride and Borohydride Catalysts for C=O Reduction and C?O Bond Cleavage
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The high catalytic reactivity of homoleptic tris(alkyl) lanthanum La{C(SiHMe2)3}3 is highlighted by C?O bond cleavage in the hydroboration of esters and epoxides at room temperature. The catalytic hydroboration tolerates functionality typically susceptible to insertion, reduction, or cleavage reactions. Turnover numbers (TON) up to 10 000 are observed for aliphatic esters. Lanthanum hydrides, generated by reactions with pinacolborane, are competent for reduction of ketones but are inert toward esters. Instead, catalytic reduction of esters requires activation of the lanthanum hydride by pinacolborane.
- Patnaik, Smita,Sadow, Aaron D.
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p. 2505 - 2509
(2019/02/01)
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- USE OF A RUTHENIUM CATALYST COMPRISING A TETRADENTATE LIGAND FOR HYDROGENATION OF ESTERS AND/OR FORMATION OF ESTERS AND A RUTHENIUM COMPLEX COMPRISING SAID TETRADENTATE LIGAND
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The present invention relates to the use of a transition metal catalyst TMC1, which comprises a transition metal M selected from metals of groups 7, 8, 9 and 10 of the periodic table of elements according to IUPAC and a tetradentate ligand of formula I wherein R1 are identical or different and are each an organic radical having from 1 to 40 carbon atoms, and R2 are identical or different and are each an organic radical having from 1 to 40 carbon atoms, as catalyst in processes for formation of compounds comprising at least one carboxylic acid ester functional group -O-C(=O)- starting from at least one primary alcohol and/or hydrogenation of compounds comprising at least one carboxylic acid ester functional group -O-C(=O)-. The present invention further relates to a process for hydrogenation of a compound comprising at least one carboxylic acid ester functional group -O-C(=O)-, to a process for the formation of a compound comprising at least one carboxylic acid ester functional group -O-C(=O)- by dehydrogenase coupling of at least one primary alcohol with a second alcoholic OH-group, to a transition metal complex comprising the tetradentate ligand of formula I and to a process for preparing said transition metal complex.
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Page/Page column 29-30
(2019/08/20)
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- General and Phosphine-Free Cobalt-Catalyzed Hydrogenation of Esters to Alcohols
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Catalytic hydrogenation of esters is essential for the sustainable production of alcohols in organic synthesis and chemical industry. Herein, we describe the first non-noble metal catalytic system that enables an efficient hydrogenation of non-activated esters to alcohols in the absence of phosphine ligands (with a maximum turnover number of 2391). The general applicability of this protocol was demonstrated by the high-yielding hydrogenation of 39 ester substrates including aromatic/aliphatic esters, lactones, polyesters and various pharmaceutical molecules.
- Shao, Zhihui,Zhong, Rui,Ferraccioli, Raffaella,Li, Yibiao,Liu, Qiang
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supporting information
p. 1125 - 1130
(2019/10/22)
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- Hafnium trifluoromethanesulfonate catalyzed silyl ether protecting group removing method
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The invention provides a hafnium trifluoromethanesulfonate catalyzed silyl ether protecting group removing method. Various silyl ether protecting groups of nearly 50 kinds of substrates can be efficiently removed in 0.5-16 hours at room temperature by taking 0.02mol%-0.3mol% hafnium trifluoromethanesulfonate as a catalyst, a silyl ether protected hydroxyl compound as a substrate and conventional AR methanol as a solvent. 42 kinds of silyl ether protecting group removing products can be obtained at high yield by performing conventional slica column chromatography purification on a crude product. By regulating the use amount of the catalyst, the Hf(OTf)4 catalyst can realize regioselective removal of 1-degree, 2-degree and 3-degree alkyl TBS and aryl TBS protective groups. Moreover, in a proper equivalent scope, the Hf(OTf)4 catalyst can also realize 1) chemoselective removal of different kinds of silica-based protective groups; and 2) chemoselective removal of 1-degree TBS protective groups under the condition of not affecting a majority of common hydroxyl protective groups.
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-
Paragraph 0009; 0014
(2019/01/21)
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- Storing redox equivalent in the phenalenyl backbone towards catalytic multi-electron reduction
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Storing and transferring electrons for multi-electron reduction processes are considered to be the key steps in various important chemical and biological transformations. In this work, we accomplished multi-electron reduction of a carboxylic acid via a hydrosilylation pathway where a redox-active phenalenyl backbone in Co(PLY-O,O)2(THF)2, stores electrons and plays a preponderant role in the entire process. This reduction proceeds by single electron transfer (SET) from the mono-reduced ligand backbone leading to the cleavage of the Si-H bond. Several important intermediates along the catalytic reduction reaction have been isolated and well characterized to prove that the redox equivalent is stored in the form of a C-H bond in the PLY backbone via a ligand dearomatization process. The ligand's extensive participation in storing a hydride equivalent has been conclusively elucidated via a deuterium labelling experiment. This is a rare example where the ligand orchestrates the multielectron reduction process leaving only the metal to maintain the conformational requirements and fine tunes the electronics of the catalyst.
- Bhunia, Mrinal,Sahoo, Sumeet Ranjan,Shaw, Bikash Kumar,Vaidya, Shefali,Pariyar, Anand,Vijaykumar, Gonela,Adhikari, Debashis,Mandal, Swadhin K.
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p. 7433 - 7441
(2019/08/15)
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- Aryl Boronic Acid Catalysed Dehydrative Substitution of Benzylic Alcohols for C?O Bond Formation
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A combination of pentafluorophenylboronic acid and oxalic acid catalyses the dehydrative substitution of benzylic alcohols with a second alcohol to form new C?O bonds. This method has been applied to the intermolecular substitution of benzylic alcohols to form symmetrical ethers, intramolecular cyclisations of diols to form aryl-substituted tetrahydrofuran and tetrahydropyran derivatives, and intermolecular crossed-etherification reactions between two different alcohols. Mechanistic control experiments have identified a potential catalytic intermediate formed between the aryl boronic acid and oxalic acid.
- Estopi?á-Durán, Susana,Donnelly, Liam J.,Mclean, Euan B.,Hockin, Bryony M.,Slawin, Alexandra M. Z.,Taylor, James E.
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supporting information
p. 3950 - 3956
(2019/02/16)
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- Polypyridyl iridium(III) based catalysts for highly chemoselective hydrogenation of aldehydes
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Iridium-catalyzed transfer hydrogenation (TH) of carbonyl compounds using HCOOR (R = H, Na, NH4) as a hydrogen source is a pivotal process as it provides the clean process and is easy to execute. However, the existing highly efficient iridium catalysts work at a narrow pH; thus, does not apply to a wide variety of substrates. Therefore, the development of a new catalyst which works at a broad pH range is essential as it can gain a broader scope of utilization. Here we report highly efficient polypyridyl iridium(III) catalysts, [Ir(tpy)(L)Cl](PF6)2 {where tpy = 2,2′:6′,2′'-Terpyridine, L = phen (1,10-Phenanthroline), Me2phen (4,7-Dimethyl-1,10-phenanthroline), Me4phen (3,4,7,8-Tetramethyl-1,10-phenanthroline), Me2bpy (4,4′-Dimethyl-2–2′-dipyridyl)} for the chemoselective reduction of aldehydes to alcohols in aqueous ethanol and sodium formate as the hydride source. The reaction can be carried out efficiently in broad pH ranges, from pH 6 to 11. These catalysts are air stable, easy to prepare using commercially available starting materials, and are highly applicable for a wide range of substrates, such as electron-rich or deficient (hetero)arenes, halogens, phenols, alkoxy, ketones, esters, carboxylic acids, cyano, and nitro groups. Particularly, acid and hydroxy groups containing aldehydes were reduced successfully in basic and acidic reaction conditions, demonstrating the efficiency of the catalyst in a broad pH range with high conversion rates under microwave irradiation.
- Pandrala, Mallesh,Resendez, Angel,Malhotra, Sanjay V.
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p. 283 - 288
(2019/09/30)
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- Copper(II)-Catalyzed Selective Hydroboration of Ketones and Aldehydes
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A novel nonanuclear copper(II) complex obtained by a facile one-pot self-assembly was found to catalyze the hydroboration of ketones and aldehydes with the absence of an activator under mild, solvent-free conditions. The catalyst is air- and moisture-stable, displaying high efficiency (1980 h-1 turnover frequency, TOF) and chemoselectivity on aldehydes over ketones and ketones over imines. This represents a rare example of divalent copper catalyst for the hydroboration of carbonyls.
- Zeng, Haisu,Wu, Jing,Li, Sihan,Hui, Christina,Ta, Anita,Cheng, Shu-Yuan,Zheng, Shengping,Zhang, Guoqi
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p. 401 - 406
(2019/01/23)
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- Mild palladium-catalysed highly efficient hydrogenation of CN, C-NO2, and CO bonds using H2 of 1 atm in H2O
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Here we present the first example of a mild and high-efficiency protocol enabling a process in water using 1 atm of H2 for the efficient and selective hydrogenation of nitriles, nitro compounds, ketones, and aldehydes to yield primary amines and alcohols with satisfactory yields of up to >99%. Several palladium-based nanoparticle catalysts were prepared from K2PdCl4 and ligands, and one of them was found to be the best and most suitable for the hydrogenation of CN, C-NO2, and CO bonds. In addition, the catalyst Pd-NPs can be easily recycled and reused without losing their activity and selectivity. A plausible mechanism for the hydrogenation of a CN bond was also proposed, representing the first example that possesses great potential for sustainable industrial purposes.
- Liu, Yaxu,He, Shaopo,Quan, Ziyi,Cai, Huizhuo,Zhao, Yang,Wang, Bo
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supporting information
p. 830 - 838
(2019/02/27)
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- Practical and selective hydroboration of aldehydes and ketones in air catalysed by an iron(ii) coordination polymer
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The in air catalytic hydroboration of ketones and aldehydes with pinacolborane by an iron(ii) coordination polymer (CP) is carried out under mild and solvent-free conditions. The precatalyst is highly active towards a wide range of substrates including functionalized ketones and aldehydes in the presence of KOtBu as an activator, achieving a high turnover number (TON) of up to 9500. Excellent chemoselectivity to aldehydes over ketones was also revealed, which is in sharp contrast with the results obtained under inert atmosphere using the same catalyst system. This catalyst observed here is not only highly efficient but also recyclable for reuse for at least 5 times without losing its effectiveness.
- Zhang, Guoqi,Cheng, Jessica,Davis, Kezia,Bonifacio, Mary Grace,Zajaczkowski, Cynthia
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p. 1114 - 1121
(2019/03/12)
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- Tris(pyrazolyl)borate Cobalt-Catalyzed Hydrogenation of C=O, C=C, and C=N Bonds: An Assistant Role of a Lewis Base
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The combination of tris(pyrazolyl)borate cobalt complexes and Lewis base is developed as an efficient catalyst precursor in the homogeneous hydrogenation. A broad substrate scope including carbonyls, alkenes, enamines, and imines is reduced with 60 atm of H2 at 60 °C. Mechanistic studies support the hydrogenation operates through a frustrated Lewis pair (FLP)-like reduction process. These results highlight the development of novel non-noble metal catalytic processes, when combined with the diverse small molecule activation chemistry associated with FLPs.
- Lin, Yang,Zhu, De-Ping,Du, Yi-Ran,Zhang, Rui,Zhang, Suo-Jiang,Xu, Bao-Hua
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supporting information
p. 2693 - 2698
(2019/04/25)
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- Unlocking the catalytic potential of tris(3,4,5-trifluorophenyl)borane with microwave irradiation
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The catalytic activity of tris(3,4,5-trifluorophenyl)borane has been explored in the 1,2-hydroboration reactions of unsaturated substrates. Under conventional conditions, the borane was found to be active only in the hydroboration of aldehyde, ketone and imine substrates, with alkenes and alkynes not being reduced effectively. The use of microwave irradiation on the other hand has permitted alkenes and alkynes to be hydroborated in good yields.
- Carden, Jamie L.,Gierlichs, Lukas J.,Wass, Duncan F.,Browne, Duncan L.,Melen, Rebecca L.
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p. 318 - 321
(2019/01/09)
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- A catalytically active [Mn]-hydrogenase incorporating a non-native metal cofactor
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Nature carefully selects specific metal ions for incorporation into the enzymes that catalyse the chemical reactions necessary for life. Hydrogenases, enzymes that activate molecular H2, exclusively utilize Ni and Fe in [NiFe]-, [FeFe]- and [Fe]-hydrogeanses. However, other transition metals are known to activate or catalyse the production of hydrogen in synthetic systems. Here, we report the development of a biomimetic model complex of [Fe]-hydrogenase that incorporates a Mn, as opposed to a Fe, metal centre. This Mn complex is able to heterolytically cleave H2 as well as catalyse hydrogenation reactions. The incorporation of the model into an apoenzyme of [Fe]-hydrogenase results in a [Mn]-hydrogenase with an enhanced occupancy-normalized activity over an analogous semi-synthetic [Fe]-hydrogenase. These findings demonstrate a non-native metal hydrogenase that shows catalytic functionality and that hydrogenases based on a manganese active site are viable.
- Pan, Hui-Jie,Huang, Gangfeng,Wodrich, Matthew D.,Tirani, Farzaneh Fadaei,Ataka, Kenichi,Shima, Seigo,Hu, Xile
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p. 669 - 675
(2019/05/29)
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- Metal-Organic Capsules with NADH Mimics as Switchable Selectivity Regulators for Photocatalytic Transfer Hydrogenation
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Switchable selective hydrogenation among the groups in multifunctional compounds is challenging because selective hydrogenation is of great interest in the synthesis of fine chemicals and pharmaceuticals as a result of the importance of key intermediates. Herein, we report a new approach to highly selectively (>99%) reducing C=X (X = O, N) over the thermodynamically more favorable nitro groups locating the substrate in a metal-organic capsule containing NADH active sites. Within the capsule, the NADH active sites reduce the double bonds via a typical 2e- hydride transfer hydrogenation, and the formed excited-state NAD+ mimics oxidize the reductant via two consecutive 1e- processes to regenerate the NADH active sites under illumination. Outside the capsule, nitro groups are highly selectively reduced through a typical 1e- hydrogenation. By combining photoinduced 1e- transfer regeneration outside the cage, both 1e- and 2e- hydrogenation can be switched controllably by varying the concentrations of the substrates and the redox potential of electron donors. This promising alternative approach, which could proceed under mild reaction conditions and use easy-to-handle hydrogen donors with enhanced high selectivity toward different groups, is based on the localization and differentiation of the 2e- and 1e- hydrogenation pathways inside and outside the capsules, provides a deep comprehension of photocatalytic microscopic reaction processes, and will allow the design and optimization of catalysts. We demonstrate the advantage of this method over typical hydrogenation that involves specific activation via well-modified catalytic sites and present results on the high, well-controlled, and switchable selectivity for the hydrogenation of a variety of substituted and bifunctional aldehydes, ketones, and imines.
- Wei, Jianwei,Zhao, Liang,He, Cheng,Zheng, Sijia,Reek, Joost N. H.,Duan, Chunying
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p. 12707 - 12716
(2019/09/04)
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- Diaminodiphosphine tetradentate ligand and ruthenium complex thereof, and preparation methods and applications of ligand and complex
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The invention discloses a diaminodiphosphine tetradentate ligand and a ruthenium complex thereof, and preparation methods and applications of the ligand and the complex, and provides a ruthenium complex represented by a formula I, wherein L is a diaminodiphosphine tetradentate ligand represented by a formula II, and X and Y are respectively and independently chlorine ion, bromine ion, iodine ion,hydrogen negative ion or BH4. According to the present invention, the ruthenium complex exhibits excellent catalytic activity in the catalytic hydrogenation reactions of ester compounds, has high yield and high chemical selectivity, is compatible with conjugated and non-conjugated carbon-carbon double bond, carbon-carbon triple bond, epoxy, halogen, carbonyl and other functional groups, and hasgreat application prospects.
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Paragraph 0301-0303; 0305
(2019/11/04)
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- Dehydrogenative Coupling of Aldehydes with Alcohols Catalyzed by a Nickel Hydride Complex
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A nickel hydride complex, {2,6-(iPr2PO)2C6H3}NiH, has been shown to catalyze the coupling of RCHO and R′OH to yield RCO2R′ and RCH2OH, where the aldehyde also acts as a hydrogen acceptor and the alcohol also serves as the solvent. Functional groups tolerated by this catalytic system include CF3, NO2, Cl, Br, NHCOMe, and NMe2, whereas phenol-containing compounds are not viable substrates or solvents. The dehydrogenative coupling reaction can alternatively be catalyzed by an air-stable nickel chloride complex, {2,6-(iPr2PO)2C6H3}NiCl, in conjunction with NaOMe. Acids in unpurified aldehydes react with the hydride to form nickel carboxylate complexes, which are catalytically inactive. Water, if present in a significant quantity, decreases the catalytic efficiency by forming {2,6-(iPr2PO)2C6H3}NiOH, which causes catalyst degradation. On the other hand, in the presence of a drying agent, {2,6-(iPr2PO)2C6H3}NiOH generated in situ from {2,6-(iPr2PO)2C6H3}NiCl and NaOH can be converted to an alkoxide species, becoming catalytically competent. The proposed catalytic mechanism features aldehyde insertion into the nickel hydride as well as into a nickel alkoxide intermediate, both of which have been experimentally observed. Several mechanistically relevant nickel species including {2,6-(iPr2PO)2C6H3}NiOC(O)Ph, {2,6-(iPr2PO)2C6H3}NiOPh, and {2,6-(iPr2PO)2C6H3}NiOPh·HOPh have been independently synthesized, crystallographically characterized, and tested for the catalytic reaction. While phenol-containing molecules cannot be used as substrates or solvents, both {2,6-(iPr2PO)2C6H3}NiOPh and {2,6-(iPr2PO)2C6H3}NiOPh·HOPh are efficient in catalyzing the dehydrogenative coupling of PhCHO with EtOH.
- Eberhardt, Nathan A.,Wellala, Nadeesha P. N.,Li, Yingze,Krause, Jeanette A.,Guan, Hairong
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p. 1468 - 1478
(2019/04/17)
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