- ALUMINA CATALYZED TRANSFORMATION OF O-(3-OXOBUTYL) URETHANES
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The alumina-catalyzed transformations of urethane to a secundary amine and a sulfonyl urethane to a sulfonamide are described.Alumina is also shown to catalyze the conjugate addition of p-toluenesulfonamide to methyl vinyl ketone.
- Reitz, Allen,Verlander, Michael,Goodman, Murray
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- Nitrogen Atom Transfer Catalysis by Metallonitrene C?H Insertion: Photocatalytic Amidation of Aldehydes
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C?H amination and amidation by catalytic nitrene transfer are well-established and typically proceed via electrophilic attack of nitrenoid intermediates. In contrast, the insertion of (formal) terminal nitride ligands into C?H bonds is much less developed and catalytic nitrogen atom transfer remains unknown. We here report the synthesis of a formal terminal nitride complex of palladium. Photocrystallographic, magnetic, and computational characterization support the assignment as an authentic metallonitrene (Pd?N) with a diradical nitrogen ligand that is singly bonded to PdII. Despite the subvalent nitrene character, selective C?H insertion with aldehydes follows nucleophilic selectivity. Transamidation of the benzamide product is enabled by reaction with N3SiMe3. Based on these results, a photocatalytic protocol for aldehyde C?H trimethylsilylamidation was developed that exhibits inverted, nucleophilic selectivity as compared to typical nitrene transfer catalysis. This first example of catalytic C?H nitrogen atom transfer offers facile access to primary amides after deprotection.
- Schmidt-R?ntsch, Till,Verplancke, Hendrik,Lienert, Jonas N.,Demeshko, Serhiy,Otte, Matthias,Van Trieste, Gerard P.,Reid, Kaleb A.,Reibenspies, Joseph H.,Powers, David C.,Holthausen, Max C.,Schneider, Sven
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- Amide Bond Formation via the Rearrangement of Nitrile Imines Derived from N-2-Nitrophenyl Hydrazonyl Bromides
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We report how the rearrangement of highly reactive nitrile imines derived from N-2-nitrophenyl hydrazonyl bromides can be harnessed for the facile construction of amide bonds. This amidation reaction was found to be widely applicable to the synthesis of primary, secondary, and tertiary amides and was used as the key step in the synthesis of the lipid-lowering agent bezafibrate. The orthogonality and functional group tolerance of this approach was exemplified by the N-acylation of unprotected amino acids.
- Boyle, Mhairi,Livingstone, Keith,Henry, Martyn C.,Elwood, Jessica M. L.,Lopez-Fernandez, J. Daniel,Jamieson, Craig
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supporting information
p. 334 - 338
(2022/01/20)
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- Visible light-mediated synthesis of amides from carboxylic acids and amine-boranes
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Here, a photocatalytic deoxygenative amidation protocol using readily available amine-boranes and carboxylic acids is described. This approach features mild conditions, moderate-to-good yields, easy scale-up, and up to 62 examples of functionalized amides with diverse substituents. The synthetic robustness of this method was also demonstrated by its application in the late-stage functionalization of several pharmaceutical molecules.
- Chen, Xuenian,Kang, Jia-Xin,Ma, Yan-Na,Miao, Yu-Qi
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supporting information
p. 3595 - 3599
(2021/06/06)
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- Ru(ii)- And Ru(iv)-dmso complexes catalyze efficient and selective aqueous-phase nitrile hydration reactions under mild conditions
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New water-soluble ruthenium(ii)- and ruthenium(iv)-dmso complexes [RuCl2(dmso)2(NH3)(CH3CN)] (1), [RuCl2(dmso)3(CH3CN)] (2), and [RuCl2(dmso)3(NH3)]·PF6·Cl (3) have been synthesized and characterized using elemental analyses, IR, 1H and 31P NMR, and electronic absorption spectroscopy. The molecular structures of complexes 1-3 were determined crystallographically. The reactivity of complexes 1-3 has been tested for aqueous-phase nitrile hydration at 60 °C in air, and good efficiency and selectivity are shown for the corresponding amide derivatives. Best performance is achieved with complex 3. Amide conversions of 56-99% were obtained with a variety of aromatic, alkyl, and vinyl nitriles. The reaction tolerated hydroxyl, nitro, bromo, formyl, pyridyl, benzyl, alkyl, and olefinic functional groups. Amides were isolated by simple decantation from the aqueous-phase catalyst. A catalyst loading down to 0.0001 mol% was examined and turnover numbers as high as 990?000 were observed. The catalyst was stable for weeks in solution and could be reused more than seven times without significant loss in catalytic activity. The gram-scale reaction was also performed to produce the desired product in high yields. This journal is
- Dubey, Santosh Kumar,Kaur, Gurmeet,Rath, Nigam P.,Trivedi, Manoj
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p. 17339 - 17346
(2021/10/08)
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- A CO2-mediated base catalysis approach for the hydration of triple bonds in ionic liquids
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Herein, we report a CO2-mediated base catalysis approach for the activation of triple bonds in ionic liquids (ILs) with anions that can chemically capture CO2 (e.g., azolate, phenolate, and acetate), which can achieve hydration of triple bonds to carbonyl chemicals. It is discovered that the anion-complexed CO2 could abstract one proton from proton resources (e.g., IL cation) and transfer it to the CN or CC bonds via a six-membered ring transition state, thus realizing their hydration. In particular, tetrabutylphosphonium 2-hydroxypyridine shows high efficiency for hydration of nitriles and CC bond-containing compounds under a CO2 atmosphere, affording a series of carbonyl compounds in excellent yields. This catalytic protocol is simple, green, and highly efficient and opens a new way to access carbonyl compounds via triple bond hydration under mild and metal-free conditions.
- Han, Buxing,Ke, Zhengang,Li, Ruipeng,Liu, Zhimin,Tang, Minhao,Wang, Yuepeng,Zeng, Wei,Zhang, Fengtao,Zhao, Yanfei
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supporting information
p. 9870 - 9875
(2021/12/27)
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- Manganese-Pincer-Catalyzed Nitrile Hydration, α-Deuteration, and α-Deuterated Amide Formation via Metal Ligand Cooperation
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A simple and efficient system for the hydration and α-deuteration of nitriles to form amides, α-deuterated nitriles, and α-deuterated amides catalyzed by a single pincer complex of the earth-abundant manganese capable of metal-ligand cooperation is reported. The reaction is selective and tolerates a wide range of functional groups, giving the corresponding amides in moderate to good yields. Changing the solvent from tert-butanol to toluene and using D2O results in formation of α-deuterated nitriles in high selectivity. Moreover, α-deuterated amides can be obtained in one step directly from nitriles and D2O in THF. Preliminary mechanistic studies suggest the transformations contributing toward activation of the nitriles via a metal-ligand cooperative pathway, generating the manganese ketimido and enamido pincer complexes as the key intermediates for further transformations.
- Ben-David, Yehoshoa,Diskin-Posner, Yael,Kar, Sayan,Milstein, David,Zhou, Quan-Quan,Zou, You-Quan
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p. 10239 - 10245
(2021/08/24)
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- Nano-construction of CuO nanorods decorated with g-C3N4 nanosheets (CuO/g-C3N4-NS) as a superb colloidal nanocatalyst for liquid phase C[sbnd]H conversion of aldehydes to amides
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Herein, we describe an intelligent strategy to fabricate nanosheets of graphitic carbon nitride (g-C3N4) decorated with nanorods copper oxide (CuO NRs). Then, the catalytic activity of CuONRs/g-C3N4-NS was developed for the synthesis of primary amides in water. The morphology of CuO and its synergetics effect with nanosheets g-C3N4 a major role in the yield of products. Furthermore, hydroxylamine hydrochloride (NH2OH·HCl) due to availability and affordability was used as a suitable substitute for ammonia source. The findings demonstrate that this layer nanostructure is a superb catalyst for converting various derivatives of aldehyde to their corresponding amides. The current protocol can be useful criterion in the synthesis and stabilization of metal oxides and provides new insight in organic transformation.
- Mohammadi, Robabeh,Gholipour, Behnam,Alamgholiloo, Hassan,Rostamnia, Sadegh,Mohtasham, Hamed,Zonouzi, Afsaneh,Ramakrishna, Seeram,Shokouhimehr, Mohammadreza
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- Half-Sandwich Iridium Complexes Based on β-Ketoamino Ligands: Preparation, Structure, and Catalytic Activity in Amide Synthesis
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A series of β-ketoamino-based N,O-chelate half-sandwich iridium complexes with the general formula [Cp*IrClL] have been prepared in good yields. These air-insensitive iridium complexes showed desirable catalytic activity in an amide preparation under mild conditions. A number of amides with diverse substituted groups were furnished in a one-pot reaction with good-to-excellent yields through an amidation reaction of NH2OH·HCl with aldehydes in the presence of these iridium(III) precursors. The excellent catalytic activity, mild reaction conditions, and broad substrate scope gave this type of iridium catalyst potential for use in industry. All of the obtained iridium complexes were well characterized by different spectroscopy techniques. The exact molecular structure of complex 3 has been confirmed by single-crystal X-ray analysis.
- Wang, Yang,Guo, Wen,Guan, Ai-Lin,Liu, Shuang,Yao, Zi-Jian
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p. 11514 - 11520
(2021/07/31)
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- Efficient nitriding reagent and application thereof
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The invention discloses an efficient nitriding reagent and application thereof, wherein the nitriding reagent comprises nitrogen oxide, an active agent, a reducing agent and an organic solvent. By applying the nitriding reagent, nitrogen-containing compounds such as amide, nitrile and the like can be produced, and the method is simple in condition, low in waste discharge amount and simple in reaction equipment.
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Paragraph 0266-0268
(2021/03/31)
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- A Molecular Iron-Based System for Divergent Bond Activation: Controlling the Reactivity of Aldehydes
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The direct synthesis of amides and nitriles from readily available aldehyde precursors provides access to functional groups of major synthetic utility. To date, most reliable catalytic methods have typically been optimized to supply one product exclusively. Herein, we describe an approach centered on an operationally simple iron-based system that, depending on the reaction conditions, selectively addresses either the C=O or C-H bond of aldehydes. This way, two divergent reaction pathways can be opened to furnish both products in high yields and selectivities under mild reaction conditions. The catalyst system takes advantage of iron's dual reactivity capable of acting as (1) a Lewis acid and (2) a nitrene transfer platform to govern the aldehyde building block. The present transformation offers a rare control over the selectivity on the basis of the iron system's ionic nature. This approach expands the repertoire of protocols for amide and nitrile synthesis and shows that fine adjustments of the catalyst system's molecular environment can supply control over bond activation processes, thus providing easy access to various products from primary building blocks.
- Chatterjee, Basujit,Jena, Soumyashree,Chugh, Vishal,Weyhermüller, Thomas,Werlé, Christophe
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p. 7176 - 7185
(2021/06/30)
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- Traceless selenocarboxylates for the one-pot synthesis of amides and derivatives
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We have recently reported a one-pot procedure for glycosyl amides synthesis using selenocarboxylate as traceless reagent. Herein, we present a further application of selenocarboxylate-azide reaction for amide bond formation on a broader range of substrates, including heterocyclic systems and fatty acid. This method proved to be highly efficient for the synthesis of primary and secondary amides, sulfonamides, imides, phosphoramide and also carbamate.
- Silva, Luana,Rosário, Alisson R.,Machado, Bianca M.,Lüdtke, Diogo S.
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- Cu(II)-promoted oxidative C-N bond cleavage of N-benzoylamino acids to primary aryl amides
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A novel protocol for CuCl2-promoted oxidative C-N bond cleavage of N-benzoyl amino acids was developed. It is the first example of using accessible amino acid as an ammonia synthetic equivalent for the synthesis of primary aryl amides via CuCl2-promoted oxidative C-N bond cleavage reaction. The present protocol shows excellent functional group tolerance and provides an alternative method for the synthetic of primary aryl amides in 84-96% yields.
- Zhou, Liandi,Liu, Wei,Zhao, Yongli,Chen, Junmin
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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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supporting information
(2021/11/17)
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- Amide bond formation in aqueous solution: Direct coupling of metal carboxylate salts with ammonium salts at room temperature
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Herein, we report a green, expeditious, and practically simple protocol for direct coupling of carboxylate salts and ammonium salts under ACN/H2O conditions at room temperature without the addition of tertiary amine bases. The water-soluble coupling reagent EDC·HCl is a key component in the reaction. The reaction runs smoothly with unsubstituted/substituted ammonium salts and provides a clean product without column chromatography. Our reaction tolerates both carboxylate (which are unstable in other forms) and amine salts (which are unstable/volatile when present in free form). We believe that the reported method could be used as an alternative and suitable method at the laboratory and industrial scales. This journal is
- Nielsen, John,Tung, Truong Thanh
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supporting information
p. 10073 - 10080
(2021/12/10)
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- Does electrophilic activation of nitroalkanes in polyphosphoric acid involve formation of nitrile oxides?
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The mechanistic rationale involving activation of nitroalkanes towards interaction with nucleophilic reagents in the presence of polyphosphoric acid (PPA) was re-evaluated. Could nitrile oxide moieties be formed during this process? This experiment demonstrates that at least in some cases this could happen, as generated nitrile oxides were successfully intercepted as adducts of [3 + 2] cycloadditions. This journal is
- Aksenov, Alexander V.,Aksenov, Dmitrii A.,Aksenov, Nicolai A.,Kirilov, Nikita K.,Kurenkov, Igor A.,Nobi, Mezvah A.,Rubin, Michael,Skomorokhov, Anton A.,Sorokina, Elena A.
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p. 35937 - 35945
(2021/12/02)
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- Mechanochemical Synthesis of Primary Amides
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Ball milling of aromatic, heteroaromatic, vinylic, and aliphatic esters with ethanol and calcium nitride afforded the corresponding primary amides in a transformation that was compatible with a variety of functional groups and maintained the integrity of a stereocenter α to carbonyl. This methodology was applied to α-amino esters and N-BOC dipeptide esters and also to the synthesis of rufinamide, an antiepileptic drug.
- Gómez-Carpintero, Jorge,Sánchez, J. Domingo,González, J. Francisco,Menéndez, J. Carlos
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p. 14232 - 14237
(2021/10/20)
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- Ring Opening/Site Selective Cleavage in N-Acyl Glutarimide to Synthesize Primary Amides
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A LiOH-promoted hydrolysis selective C-N cleavage of twisted N-acyl glutarimide for the synthesis of primary amides under mild conditions has been developed. The reaction is triggered by a ring opening of glutarimide followed by C-N cleavage to afford primary amides using 2 equiv of LiOH as the base at room temperature. The efficacy of the reactions was considered and administrated for various aryl and alkyl substituents in good yield with high selectivity. Moreover, gram-scale synthesis of primary amides using a continuous flow method was achieved. It is noted that our new methodology can apply under both batch and flow conditions for synthetic and industrial applications.
- Govindan, Karthick,Lin, Wei-Yu
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supporting information
p. 1600 - 1605
(2021/03/03)
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- Unlocking Amides through Selective C–N Bond Cleavage: Allyl Bromide-Mediated Divergent Synthesis of Nitrogen-Containing Functional Groups
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We report a new set of reactions based on the unlocking of amides through simple treatment with allyl bromide, creating a common platform for accessing a diverse range of nitrogen-containing functional groups such as primary amides, sulfonamides, primary amines, N-acyl compounds (esters, thioesters, amides), and N-sulfonyl esters. The method has potential industrial applicability, as demonstrated through gram-scale syntheses in batch and in a continuous flow system.
- Govindan, Karthick,Chen, Nian-Qi,Chuang, Yu-Wei,Lin, Wei-Yu
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supporting information
p. 9419 - 9424
(2021/11/30)
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- Ruthenium(II) complexes bearing bidentate acylthiourea ligands for direct oxidation of amine α-carbon to amide
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In this study, the synthesis and structural characterization of ruthenium complexes supported by S,O-acylthiourea ligands (L1-L6) with different substituent groups as well as auxiliary ligands PPH3, CO, and Cl and their evaluation as catalysts for direct oxidation of the α-methylene group in amines were reported. Ru(II) complexes, Ru1-Ru6, were prepared from the reaction of the RuH(CO)Cl(PPh3)3 precursor and ligands L1-L6 having different electronic and steric properties. The ligands and complexes prepared were characterized by FT-IR, 1H–13C- and/or 31P NMR spectroscopic techniques. The molecular structures of Ru1 and Ru3 complexes with appropriate crystal quality were also confirmed by X-ray single crystal analysis. Solid-state structures of Ru1 and Ru3 revealed that the ruthenium center is surrounded by one carbonyl, one chloride, two PPh3 ligands, and the S,O-donor atoms from the acylthiourea ligand in bidentate monoanionic form. The catalytic activity of all complexes for the α-oxygenation reactions of primary benzylic amines to amides was investigated. Overall, all catalysts exhibited excellent activity and selectivity towards the formation of amide production under the present reaction conditions. In addition, both catalyst activation and product selectivity/formation were particularly dependent on the amount/type of base and oxygen.
- Aslan, Muhammed,Gumus, Ilkay
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- Aerobic oxidation of primary amines to amides catalyzed by an annulated mesoionic carbene (MIC) stabilized Ru complex
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Catalytic aerobic oxidation of primary amines to the amides, using the precatalyst [Ru(COD)(L1)Br2] (1) bearing an annulated π-conjugated imidazo[1,2-a][1,8]naphthyridine-based mesoionic carbene ligand L1, is disclosed. This catalytic protocol is distinguished by its high activity and selectivity, wide substrate scope and modest reaction conditions. A variety of primary amines, RCH2NH2 (R = aliphatic, aromatic and heteroaromatic), are converted to the corresponding amides using ambient air as an oxidant in the presence of a sub-stoichiometric amount of KOtBu in tBuOH. A set of control experiments, Hammett relationships, kinetic studies and DFT calculations are undertaken to divulge mechanistic details of the amine oxidation using 1. The catalytic reaction involves abstraction of two amine protons and two benzylic hydrogen atoms of the metal-bound primary amine by the oxo and hydroxo ligands, respectively. A β-hydride transfer step for the benzylic C-H bond cleavage is not supported by Hammett studies. The nitrile generated by the catalytic oxidation undergoes hydration to afford the amide as the final product. This journal is
- Yadav, Suman,Reshi, Noor U Din,Pal, Saikat,Bera, Jitendra K.
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p. 7018 - 7028
(2021/11/17)
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- The polyhedral nature of selenium-catalysed reactions: Se(iv) species instead of Se(vi) species make the difference in the on water selenium-mediated oxidation of arylamines
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Selenium-catalysed oxidations are highly sought after in organic synthesis and biology. Herein, we report our studies on the on water selenium mediated oxidation of anilines. In the presence of diphenyl diselenide or benzeneseleninic acid, anilines react with hydrogen peroxide, providing direct and selective access to nitroarenes. On the other hand, the use of selenium dioxide or sodium selenite leads to azoxyarenes. Careful mechanistic analysis and 77Se NMR studies revealed that only Se(iv) species, such as benzeneperoxyseleninic acid, are the active oxidants involved in the catalytic cycle operating in water and leading to nitroarenes. While other selenium-catalysed oxidations occurring in organic solvents have been recently demonstrated to proceed through Se(vi) key intermediates, the on water oxidation of anilines to nitroarenes does not. These findings shed new light on the multifaceted nature of organoselenium-catalysed transformations and open new directions to exploit selenium-based catalysis.
- Capperucci, Antonella,Dalia, Camilla,Tanini, Damiano
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supporting information
p. 5680 - 5686
(2021/08/16)
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- Product selectivity controlled by manganese oxide crystals in catalytic ammoxidation
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The performances of heterogeneous catalysts can be effectively tuned by changing the catalyst structures. Here we report a controllable nitrile synthesis from alcohol ammoxidation, where the nitrile hydration side reaction could be efficiently prevented by changing the manganese oxide catalysts. α-Mn2O3 based catalysts are highly selective for nitrile synthesis, but MnO2-based catalysts including α, β, γ, and δ phases favour the amide production from tandem ammoxidation and hydration steps. Multiple structural, kinetic, and spectroscopic investigations reveal that water decomposition is hindered on α-Mn2O3, thus to switch off the nitrile hydration. In addition, the selectivity-control feature of manganese oxide catalysts is mainly related to their crystalline nature rather than oxide morphology, although the morphological issue is usually regarded as a crucial factor in many reactions.
- Hui, Yu,Luo, Qingsong,Qin, Yucai,Song, Lijuan,Wang, Hai,Wang, Liang,Xiao, Feng-Shou
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p. 2164 - 2172
(2021/09/20)
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- Green and efficient Beckmann rearrangement by Cu(II) contained nano-silica triazine based dendrimer in water
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In this research, a Cu(II) contained nano-silica triazine based dendrimer was prepared, characterized, and utilized as a retrievable catalytic system (Cu(II)-TrDen@nSiO2) for green formation of primary amides in water at room temperature. The structure of nanoparticles was fully characterized by using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), and thermogravimetry analysis (TGA). The results revealed that the nanoparticles have spherical morphology and an average size of around 40 nm. The analysis also illustrated that the copper nanoparticles had been successfully loaded on the nitrogen-rich dendritic structure with a uniform distribution. The inductively coupled plasma analysis showed that about 0.67 mmol/g of Cu was loaded on the Cu(II)-TrDen@nSiO2 support. Mild reaction conditions, excellent yields, environment-friendly synthesis, and easily prepared starting materials are the key features of the present method. The catalyst is easily removed from the reaction media using a simple filtration and can be re-used at least five times without any considerable loss of its catalytic activity.
- Bahreininejad, Mohammad Hasan,Moeinpour, Farid
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p. 893 - 901
(2021/01/12)
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- N-(Hydroxybenzyl)benzamide Derivatives: Aqueous pH-Dependent Kinetics and Mechanistic Implications for the Aqueous Reactivity of Carbinolamides
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The rate constants for the aqueous reaction, between pH 0 and 14, have been determined for a series of amide substituted N-(hydroxybenzyl)benzamide derivatives, in H2O, at 25 °C, I = 1.0 M (KCl). The N-(hydroxybenzyl)benzamide derivatives were found to react via three distinct mechanisms with the kinetically dominant mechanism being dependent on the pH of the reaction solution. It has been shown that the carbinolamides react via a specific-base-catalyzed mechanism (E1cB-like) under basic and pH neutral conditions. At lower pH values, an acid-catalyzed mechanism was kinetically dominant and, last, a water reaction was postulated at pH values where neither the hydroxide-dependent nor the general-acid-catalyzed mechanism was dominant. Contrary to earlier studies with N-(hydroxymethyl)benzamide compounds, no evidence for mechanistic variation based upon the nature of the amidic substituent was observed for any of the N-(hydroxybenzyl)benzamide derivatives studied between pH values of 0-14. The rate for the acid-catalyzed reaction (kH, ρ = -1.17), the apparent second-order hydroxide rate constant (k1′, ρ = 0.87), the hydroxide-independent rate (k1, ρ = 0.65), and the pKa's of the hydroxyl group of the carbinolamide (ρ = 0.23) are reported.
- Koyanagi, Takaoki,Nagorski, Richard W.,Przybyla, David E.,Rafie, Mohammad I.,Siena, Paul M.
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- Design, synthesis, and bioactivities of novel pyridazinone derivatives containing 2-phenylthiazole or oxazole skeletons
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A series of novel pyridazinone derivatives were designed and synthesized by replacing 4-(tert-butyl)phenyl moiety of pyridaben with 2-phenylthiazole or oxazole fragments via activity substructure connecting approach. The structures of all target compounds were characterized through NMR, MS, and elemental analysis. Bioassay results exhibit that most compounds showed potent bioactivities against Aphis fabae, Tetranychus urticae, Erysiphe graminis, and/or Puccinia polysora. Among the newly synthesized compounds, 2-(tert-butyl)-4-chloro-5-(((2-phenylthiazol-4-yl)methyl)thio)pyridazin-3(2H)-one (12b) displays remarkable insecticidal activity against A fabae. Its LC50 value (2.73 mg/L) is better than that of pyridaben (5.46 mg/L), although inferior to that of imidacloprid (0.51 mg/L). In addition to its extraordinary insecticidal activity, compound 12b also exerts 96.9% fungicidal activities against P polysora at 500 mg/L in vivo, significantly superior to that of pyridaben (50.0%), while slightly lower than that of tebuconazole (100%). This article discusses the synthesis, bioassay results, and structure-activity relationship of this series of novel pyridazinone derivatives.
- Dang, Mingming,Liu, Minhua,Huang, Lu,Ou, Xiaoming,Long, Chuyun,Liu, Xingping,Ren, Yeguo,Zhang, Ping,Huang, Mingzhi,Liu, Aiping
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p. 4088 - 4098
(2020/10/02)
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- Ru-based complexes as heterogeneous potential catalysts for the amidation of aldehydes and nitriles in neat water
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Five novel heterogeneous mononuclear complex-anchored Ru(III) have been efficiently sono-synthesized and characterized by utilizing several analytical techniques. The assembled complexes could be utilized as effective, robust and recyclable (up to eight consecutive runs) catalysts for one-pot transformation of a vast array of nitriles and aldehydes to primary amides in H2O under aerobic conditions. Moreover, some unreported di- and tetra-amide derivatives were obtained also under the optimal conditions. The results of ICP/OES analysis demonstrated that there is no detected leaching of the recycled catalyst, which suggests the real heterogeneity of the present protocol. The present Ru-complexes exhibited superiority compared to other reported catalysts for amide preparation in terms of low catalyst load, short reaction time, low operating temperature, no hazardous additives required, and high values of TON (990) and TOF (1980 h11).
- Arafa, Wael Abdelgayed Ahmed
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p. 1056 - 1064
(2020/11/09)
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- Half-sandwich ruthenium(II) complexes containing biphenylamine based Schiff base ligands: Synthesis, structure and catalytic activity in amidation of various aldehydes
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New half-sandwich ruthenium (II) complexes [η6?p-cymene)Ru (L1-3)Cl] (1–3) containing biphenylamine based Schiff base ligands (HL1-3) have been synthesized and characterized by analytical and spectroscopic methods. Additionally, the solid state structure of 2 has been determined by single crystal X-ray diffraction study. The complex 2 serves as a catalyst for the amidation of various aldehydes to amides in good yield.
- Nagalakshmi, Veerasamy,Nandhini, Raja,Brindha, Veerappan,Krishnamoorthy, Bellie Sundaram,Balasubramani, Kasthuri
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- Ruthenium(III) 2-(aminofluoreneazo)phenolate complexes: Synthesis, characterization, catalytic activity in amidation reaction and Fluorescence quenching studies
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A series of ruthenium(III)2-(aminofluoreneazo)phenolate complexes with general formula [RuCl(PPh3)2(L1-5)] (1–5) (L = 2-(aminofluoreneazo)phenolate ligands) have been synthesized. The characterization of the synthesized complexes was accomplished by elemental analysis, spectroscopic (FT-IR, UV–Vis, Fluorescence and EPR) and ESI-MStechniques. The catalytic performance of one of the synthesized complexes 3 for the amidation of aldehyde in the presence of NaHCO3/NH2OH·HCl has been evaluated. The fluorescence emission of complexes [RuCl(PPh3)2(L2)] (2) and [RuCl(PPh3)2(L3) (3)] are effectively quenched by 1,4-benzoquinone and 1,4-naphthoquinone in acetonitrile medium.
- Thirumal, Muniyappan,Venkatachalam, Galmari,Venkattappan, Anbazhagan
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- Nitromethane as a nitrogen donor in Schmidt-type formation of amides and nitriles
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The Schmidt reaction has been an efficient and widely used synthetic approach to amides and nitriles since its discovery in 1923. However, its application often entails the use of volatile, potentially explosive, and highly toxic azide reagents. Here, we report a sequence whereby triflic anhydride and formic and acetic acids activate the bulk chemical nitromethane to serve as a nitrogen donor in place of azides in Schmidt-like reactions. This protocol further expands the substrate scope to alkynes and simple alkyl benzenes for the preparation of amides and nitriles.
- Jiao, Ning,Liu, Jianzhong,Qiu, Xu,Song, Song,Wei, Jialiang,Wen, Xiaojin,Zhang, Cheng,Zhang, Ziyao
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supporting information
p. 281 - 285
(2020/01/28)
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- Catalyst, preparation method thereof and preparation method of amide compound
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The invention relates to a catalyst, a preparation method thereof, and a preparation method for hydrating nitrile groups into amides. The catalyst is used for catalyzing nitrile groups to be hydratedinto amides, and the structural general formula of the catalyst is shown in the specification. In the formula, a plurality of R are respectively and independently ones selected from aromatic groups, heteroaromatic groups and non-aromatic ring groups; a plurality of R are ones respectively and independently selected from linear alkyl groups and alkane aromatic groups; X is one selected from Cl and Br; and L is one selected from OTf, BF4, PF6 and SbF6. The catalyst can catalyze nitrile groups to be hydrated into amides, and the nitrile groups can be catalyzed to be hydrated into amides even at a low temperature (20-80 DEG C); besides, compared with existing common catalysts for catalyzing nitrile groups to be hydrated into amides, the catalyst has the advantages that the equivalent weight of the catalyst can be obviously reduced, and nitrile groups can reach a relatively high conversion rate when the equivalent weight of the catalyst is only 0.01 mol%-0.5 mol%; and meanwhile, the catalyst is wider in application range and can catalyze various nitrile compounds to be hydrated into amide compounds.
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Paragraph 0142-0146
(2020/01/12)
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- Supported palladium catalyzed aminocarbonylation of aryl iodides employing bench-stable CO and NH3surrogates
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A simple, efficient and phosphine free protocol for carbonylative synthesis of primary aromatic amides under polystyrene supported palladium (Pd?PS) nanoparticle (NP) catalyzed conditions has been demonstrated. Herein, instead of using two toxic and difficult to handle gases simultaneously, we have employed the solid, economical, bench stable oxalic acid as the CO source and ammonium carbamate as the NH3source in a single pot reaction. For the first time, we have applied two non-gaseous surrogates simultaneously under heterogeneous catalyst (Pd?PS) conditions for the synthesis of primary amides using an easy to handle double-vial (DV) system. The developed strategy showed a good functional group tolerance towards a wide range of aryl iodides and afforded primary aromatic amides in good yields. The Pd?PS catalyst was easy to separate and can be recycled up to four consecutive runs with small loss in catalytic activity. We have successfully extended the scope of the methodology to the synthesis of isoindole-1,3-diones from 1,2-dihalobenzene, 2-halobenzoates and 2-halobenzoic acid following double and single carbonylative cyclization approaches.
- Bains, Rohit,Das, Pralay,Kumar, Ajay,Ram, Shankar,Shaifali,Sheetal
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supporting information
p. 7193 - 7200
(2020/10/02)
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- Copper catalyzed reduction of azides with diboron under mild conditions
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We report herein the first Cu catalyzed reduction of azides with B2pin2 (pin = pinacolato) as the reductant under very mild conditions. A series of primary amines and amides were obtained in moderate to excellent yields with high chemoselectivity and good functional group tolerance. This reaction can be performed with a cheap copper salt, a simple NHC ligand and a diboron reagent.
- Chen, Yang,Deng, Shengqi,Gao, Yihua,Liu, Liwen,Liu, Yu,Lu, Da,Wang, Qianwen,Zhang, Xiao
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supporting information
(2020/02/27)
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- Pyridine-Enabled C-N Bond Activation for the Rapid Construction of Amides and 4-Pyridylglyoxamides by Cooperative Palladium/Copper Catalysis
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A pyridine-enabled C-N bond activation of peptidomimetics employing cooperative palladium/copper catalysis in water is developed. Diverse amides and 4-pyridylglyoxamides are simultaneously synthesized through two steps from commercially available materials in a rapid, environmentally friendly, and high atom-economical manner.
- Song, Liangliang,Claessen, Sander,Van Der Eycken, Erik V.
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p. 8045 - 8054
(2020/07/15)
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- Base-Mediated Amination of Alcohols Using Amidines
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Novel and efficient base-mediated N-alkylation and amidation of amidines with alcohols have been developed, which can be carried out in one-pot reaction conditions, which allows for the synthesis of a wide range of N-alkyl amines and free amides in good to excellent yields with high atom economy. In contrast to borrowing hydrogen/hydrogen autotransfer or oxidative-type N-alkylation reactions, in which alcohols are activated by transition-metal-catalyzed or oxidative aerobic dehydrogenation, the use of amidines provides an effective surrogate of amines. This circumvents the inherent necessity in N-alkylation of an oxidant or a catalyst to be stabilized by ligands.
- Chen, Jianbin,Fang, Yanchen,Jia, Xiaofei,Jiang, Shaohua,Li, Zehua,Liang, Zuyu,Lu, Fenghong,Qi, Shuo,Ren, Chaoyu,Yu, Shuangming,Zhang, Chunyan,Zhang, Guoying,Zhang, Sheng
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p. 7728 - 7738
(2020/07/15)
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- Direct synthesis of amides from nonactivated carboxylic acids using urea as nitrogen source and Mg(NO3)2or imidazole as catalysts
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A new method for the direct synthesis of primary and secondary amides from carboxylic acids is described using Mg(NO3)2·6H2O or imidazole as a low-cost and readily available catalyst, and urea as a stable, and easy to manipulate nitrogen source. This methodology is particularly useful for the direct synthesis of primary and methyl amides avoiding the use of ammonia and methylamine gas which can be tedious to manipulate. Furthermore, the transformation does not require the employment of coupling or activating agents which are commonly required.
- Blacker, A. John,Chhatwal, A. Rosie,Lomax, Helen V.,Marcé, Patricia,Williams, Jonathan M. J.
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p. 5808 - 5818
(2020/06/21)
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- Transamidation for the Synthesis of Primary Amides at Room Temperature
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Various primary amides have been synthesized using the transamidation of various tertiary amides under metal-free and mild reaction conditions. When (NH4)2CO3 reacts with a tertiary amide bearing an N-electron-withdrawing substituent, such as sulfonyl and diacyl, in DMSO at 25 °C, the desired primary amide product is formed in good yield with good funcctional group tolerance. In addition, N-tosylated lactam derivatives afforded their corresponding N-tosylamido alkyl amide products via a ring opening reaction.
- Chen, Jiajia,Lee, Sunwoo,Xia, Yuanzhi
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supporting information
(2020/05/05)
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- Aerobic oxidation of primary benzylic amines to amides and nitriles catalyzed by ruthenium carbonyl clusters carrying N,O-bidentate ligands
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Four trinuclear ruthenium carbonyl clusters, (6-BrPyCHRO)2Ru3(CO)8 (R = 4-OCH3C6H4, 1a; R = 4-BrC6H4, 1b) and (2-OC6H4-HCN-C6H4R)2Ru3(CO)8 (R = 4-OCH3, 2a; R = 4-Br, 2b), were synthesized from the reactions of Ru3(CO)12 with the corresponding N,O-bidentate ligands (two pyridyl alcohols and two Schiff bases) respectively in a ratio of 1:2. Three new complexes 1b, 2a and 2b have been fully characterized by elemental analysis, FT-IR, NMR and X-ray crystallography. The catalytic activity of these ruthenium complexes for the aerobic oxidation of primary benzylic amines to amides and nitriles in the presence of t-BuOK was investigated, of which the Schiff base complex 2a was found to exhibit the highest activity.
- Dong, Qing,Han, Zhangang,Hao, Zhiqiang,Li, Ying,Lin, Jin,Lu, Guo-Liang,Meng, Lizhen,Yan, Xinlong
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p. 3480 - 3487
(2020/04/02)
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- Chemoselective Synthesis of Aryl Ketones from Amides and Grignard Reagents via C(O)-N Bond Cleavage under Catalyst-Free Conditions
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Conversion of a wide range of N-Boc amides to aryl ketones was achieved with Grignard reagents via chemoselective C(O)-N bond cleavage. The reactions proceeded under catalyst-free conditions with different aryl, alkyl, and alkynyl Grignard reagents. α-Ketoamide was successfully converted to aryl diketones, while α,β-unsaturated amide underwent 1,4-addition followed by C(O)-N bond cleavage to provide diaryl propiophenones. N-Boc amides displayed higher reactivity than Weinreb amides with Grignard reagents. A broad substrate scope, excellent yields, and quick conversion are important features of this methodology.
- Sureshbabu, Popuri,Azeez, Sadaf,Muniyappan, Nalluchamy,Sabiah, Shahulhameed,Kandasamy, Jeyakumar
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p. 11823 - 11838
(2019/10/02)
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- Hydration of nitriles using a metal-ligand cooperative ruthenium pincer catalyst
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Nitrile hydration provides access to amides that are important structural elements in organic chemistry. Here we report catalytic nitrile hydration using ruthenium catalysts based on a pincer scaffold with a dearomatized pyridine backbone. These complexes catalyze the nucleophilic addition of H2O to a wide variety of aliphatic and (hetero)aromatic nitriles in tBuOH as solvent. Reactions occur under mild conditions (room temperature) in the absence of additives. A mechanism for nitrile hydration is proposed that is initiated by metal-ligand cooperative binding of the nitrile.
- Guo, Beibei,Otten, Edwin,De Vries, Johannes G.
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p. 10647 - 10652
(2019/12/02)
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- Activation of nitriles by silver(I) N-heterocyclic carbenes: An efficient on-water synthesis of primary amides
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A first example of silver(I) N-heterocyclic carbene (Ag(I)-NHC) catalyzed on-water synthesis of primary amides by hydration of nitriles under mild reaction conditions is described. This organometallic catalytic system has excellent tolerance for various homo-aromatic, hetero-aromatic and aliphatic nitriles to afford primary amides in good yields in neat water.
- Thirukovela, Narasimha Swamy,Balaboina, Ramesh,Kankala, Shravankumar,Vadde, Ravindhar,Vasam, Chandra Sekhar
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supporting information
p. 2637 - 2641
(2019/03/21)
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- Trash to treasure: Eco-friendly and practical synthesis of amides by nitriles hydrolysis in WepPA
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The hydration of nitriles to amides in a water extract of pomelo peel ash (WEPPA) was realized with moderate to excellent yields without using external transition metals, bases or organic solvents. This reaction features a broad substrate scope, wide functional group tolerance, prominent chemoselectivity, and good reusability. Notably, a magnification experiment in this bio-based solvent at 100 mmol further demonstrated its practicability.
- Sun, Yajun,Jin, Weiwei,Liu, Chenjiang
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supporting information
(2019/11/11)
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- Solvent-Tailored Pd3P0.95 nano catalyst for amide-nitrile inter-conversion, the hydration of nitriles and transfer hydrogenation of the CO bond
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For the first time, a one pot thermolysis of [Pd(PPh3)2Cl2] prepared by reacting Ph3P with PdCl2 in a 2:1 molar ratio in MeOH at 280 °C in a trioctylphosphine (TOP) and oleylamine(OA)-octadecane(ODE) mixture (1:1) was used to prepare quantum dots (QDs; size ~2-3 nm) and nanoparticles (NPs; size ~13-14 nm), respectively, of composition Pd3P0.95. TEM, SEM-EDX, powder-XRD and XPS (for QDs only) were used to authenticate the two nanophases. 31P{1H}NMR experiments performed to monitor the progress of thermolysis reactions revealed that the phosphorus present in the Pd3P0.95 QDs had come from TOP, whereas in Pd3P0.95 NPs, its source is triphenylphosphine. The nature of the solvent did not affect the chemical composition of the nano-phase but controlled its size. Probably, solvent dependent, unique, single source precursors (SSPs) of palladium were generated in situ, and controlled the size. The catalytic activity of both Pd3P0.95 QDs and NPs was explored. The QDs were found to be efficient as a catalyst for the amide-nitrile interconversion at room temperature (yield up to 92% in 4 h), hydration of nitriles and transfer hydrogenation (TH) of carbonyl compounds with yields up to 96% in 3-4 h. The yields and reaction rates of amide-nitrile inter-conversion and TH when catalyzed by Pd3P0.95 QDs were found to be higher compared to the ones observed with the Pd/C catalyst. The binding energy of Pd(3d) in the X-ray photoelectron spectrum (XPS) of Pd3P0.95 indicated an electron transfer from the metal to phosphorus, resulting in electron deficient palladium, which facilitates the coordination of a substrate to Pd and drives the reaction. The reusability of Pd3P0.95 QDs for the interconversion was found to be up to 4-Times, while for the transfer hydrogenation of carbonyl compounds it was up to 6-Times, but with a diminished yield. Pd3P0.95 NPs were found to be less active (yield up to 36% in optimized reaction conditions) in comparison to Pd3P0.95 QDs. The mercury poisoning test suggested that the catalysis predominantly proceeded heterogeneously on the surface of the QDs. The PXRD and XPS results did not suggest a significant variation in the phase of QDs after the third catalytic cycle. The bleeding of Pd during catalysis (determined by flame AAS) and the agglomeration of QDs as supported by the SEM-EDX and TEM results are probably responsible for the reduction in the catalytic activity of QDs after reusing three times.
- Sharma, Alpesh K.,Joshi, Hemant,Bhaskar, Renu,Singh, Ajai K.
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supporting information
p. 10962 - 10970
(2019/07/31)
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- Aqueous-Phase Nitrile Hydration Catalyzed by an In Situ Generated Air-Stable Ruthenium Catalyst
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RuCl2(PTA)4 (PTA=1,3,5-triaza-7-phosphaadamantane) is an active, recyclable, air-stable, aqueous-phase nitrile hydration catalyst. The development of an in situ generated aqueous-phase nitrile hydration catalyst (RuCl3?3 H2O+6 equivalents PTA) is reported. The activity of the in situ catalyst is comparable to RuCl2(PTA)4. The effects of [PTA] on the activity of the reaction were investigated: the catalytic activity, in general, increases as the pH goes up, which shows a positive correlation with [PTA]. The pH effects were further explored for both the in situ and RuCl2(PTA)4 catalyzed reaction in phosphate buffer solutions with particular attention given to pH 6.8 buffer. Increased catalytic activity was observed at pH 6.8 versus water for both systems with turnover frequency (TOF) up to 135 h?1 observed for RuCl2(PTA)4 and 64 h?1 for the in situ catalyst. Catalyst loading down to 0.001 mol % was examined with turnover numbers as high as 22 000 reported. Similar to the preformed catalyst, RuCl2(PTA)4, the in situ catalyst could be recycled more than five times without significant loss of activity from either water or pH 6.8 buffer.
- Ounkham, Whalmany L.,Weeden, Jason A.,Frost, Brian J.
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supporting information
p. 10013 - 10020
(2019/07/15)
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- Ru (III) Schiff-base complex anchored on nanosilica as an efficient and retrievable catalyst for hydration of nitriles
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Transition metal catalyzed hydration of nitriles is an attractive methodology for amide synthesis, and hence recently attracted wide attention. It is one of the significant organic transformations as amides play a vital role in biological, pharmaceutical and industrial applications. In this work, we report the synthesis of a new solid supported Ru (III) Schiff base complex, Ru@imine-nanoSiO2 immobilized on nanosilica obtained from rice husk. The complex was characterized by FTIR, powder X-ray diffraction, BET surface area measurement, UV–vis, SEM–EDX, TEM, ESR, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and ICP-AES analysis. Using Ru@imine-nanoSiO2 as the catalyst, the hydration of nitriles in i-PrOH at 40?°C was studied which resulted in good isolated yields (60–99%). The catalyst can be recycled and reused up to 5th cycle without any loss in activity. The products were characterized by FTIR, GC–MS and 1H-NMR spectroscopy and compared with authentic samples.
- Sultana, Samim,Borah, Geetika,Gogoi, Pradip K.
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- (Ar-tpy)RuII(ACN)3: A Water-Soluble Catalyst for Aldehyde Amidation, Olefin Oxo-Scissoring, and Alkyne Oxygenation
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The synthetic chemists always look for developing new catalysts, sustainable catalysis, and their applications in various organic transformations. Herein, we report a new class of water-soluble complexes, (Ar-tpy)RuII(ACN)3, utilizing designed terpyridines possessing electron-donating and -withdrawing aromatic residues for tuning the catalytic activity of the Ru(II) complex. These complexes displayed excellent catalytic activity for several oxidative organic transformations including late-stage C-H functionalization of aldehydes with NH2OR to valuable primary amides in nonconventional aqueous media with excellent yield. Its diverse catalytic power was established for direct oxo-scissoring of a wide range of alkenes to furnish aldehydes and/or ketones in high yield using a low catalyst loading in the water. Its smart catalytic activity under mild conditions was validated for dioxygenation of alkynes to highly demanding labile synthons, 1,2-diketones, and/or acids. This general and sustainable catalysis was successfully employed on sugar-based substrates to obtain the chiral amides, aldehydes, and labile 1,2-diketones. The catalyst is recovered and reused with a moderate turnover. The proposed mechanistic pathway is supported by isolation of the intermediates and their characterization. This multifaceted sustainable catalysis is a unique tool, especially for late-stage functionalization, to furnish the targeted compounds through frequently used amidation and oxygenation processes in the academia and industry.
- Joarder, Dripta De,Gayen, Subrata,Sarkar, Rajarshi,Bhattacharya, Rajarshi,Roy, Sima,Maiti, Dilip K.
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p. 8468 - 8480
(2019/07/03)
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- Ti-superoxide catalyzed oxidative amidation of aldehydes with saccharin as nitrogen source: Synthesis of primary amides
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A new heterogeneous catalytic system (Ti-superoxide/saccharin/TBHP) has been developed that efficiently catalyzes oxidative amidation of aldehydes to produce various primary amides. The protocol employs saccharin as amine source and was found to tolerate a wide range of substrates with different functional groups. Moderate to excellent yields, catalyst reusability and operational simplicity are the main highlights. A possible mechanism and the role of the catalyst in oxidative amidation have also been discussed.
- Kamble, Rohit B.,Mane, Kishor D.,Rupanawar, Bapurao D.,Korekar, Pranjal,Sudalai,Suryavanshi, Gurunath
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p. 724 - 728
(2020/01/23)
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- (η6-Benzene)Ru(II) half-sandwich complexes of pyrazolated chalcogenoethers for catalytic activation of aldehydes to amides transformation
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The reaction of [(η6-C6H6)RuCl(μ-Cl)]2 with chalcogenoether substituted 1H-pyrazole ligands (L1-L3) in methanol have yielded three novel Ru(II) half-sandwich complexes [(η6-C6H6)RuCl(L)]PF6 (1–3) in high yield under the ambient reaction conditions. The NMR, MS and FT-IR analytical techniques were used to identify their structures. The molecular structures of the complexes 2 and 3 were established with X-ray crystallographic analysis and revealed a pseudo-octahedral half sandwich piano-stool geometry around ruthenium in each complex. Complexes 1–3 are thermally robust and were found to be insensitive towards the air and moisture. All the complexes were found to be catalytically active and produced the excellent yields of amides (up to 95%) from corresponding aldehydes. In contrast to the previous reported catalytic systems for aldehyde to amide transformation, the present complexes 1–3 are very efficient and have several advantages in terms of low catalyst loading, reaction time, temperature and wide applicability for various substituted aldehydes. Owing to the stronger σ-donor coordination properties of selenium containing ligands, the complex 2 was found to be more efficient as compare to the sulphur and tellurium analogues.
- Sharma, Kamal Nayan,Ali, Munsaf,Srivastava, Avinash Kumar,Joshi, Raj Kumar
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- Appraisal of Ruthenium(II)complexes of (4-phenoxyphenylazo)ligands for the synthesis of primary amides by dint of hydroxylamine hydrochloride and aldehydes
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A new family of O, N donor-functionalized (4-phenoxyphenylazo)-2-naphthol/4-substituted phenol-based ligands (HL1-HL4)has been synthesized. The prepared ligands were successfully utilized for the access of a series of ruthenium(II)carbonyl complexes of the type [Ru(L)Cl(CO)(EPh3)3](E = phosphine/arsine), (L = 1-(4-phenoxyphenylazo)-2-naphthol (HL1), 2-(4-phenoxyphenylazo)-4-chlorophenol (HL2), 2-(4-phenoxyphenylazo)-4-methylphenol (HL3)and 2-(4-phenoxyphenylazo)-4-methoxyphenol (HL4)). All of the ruthenium(II)carbonyl complexes and ligands have been fully characterized by FT-IR, UV–visible, 1H NMR, 31P NMR, mass spectrometry and CHN analysis. The ligands have been analyzed by 13C NMR. The UV–visible spectroscopic study reveals that both the ligands and Ru(II)complexes exhibit excellent charge transfer transitions. This is the basic criteria for the oxidative amidation reaction, which is an influential strategy for the transformation of oxygenated organic compounds to the profitable amides. However, this catalytic process makes more impact on the application of new divalent ruthenium(II)azo compounds as catalyst in a single-pot conversion of aldehydes to amides in the presence of NaHCO3.
- Vinoth, Govindasamy,Indira, Sekar,Bharathi, Madheswaran,Sounthararajan, Muniyan,Sakthi, Dharmalingam,Bharathi, Kuppannan Shanmuga
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- Half-sandwich ruthenium(II)complexes containing O, N bidentate azo ligands: Synthesis, structure and their catalytic activity towards one-pot conversion of aldehydes to primary amides and transfer hydrogenation of ketones
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The ruthenium(II)complexes of the general formula [Ru(η6?p?cymene)(Cl)(L1?5)](L = O, N-donors of biphenylazo derivatives), formed by reacting 2?(biphenylazo)phenol (HL1 ? HL4)and 1?(biphenylazo)naphthol ligands (HL5)with [{η6?p?cymene)RuCl}2(μ?Cl)2]have been synthesized. The compositions of the complexes have been established by IR, UV–Vis, 1H NMR spectral methods and X-ray crystallography. The synthesized complex could act as an efficient, reusable homogeneous catalyst for transformation of aldehydes to the corresponding primary amides in the presence of NH2OH·HCl, thus resulting an expansion of Beckmann rearrangement. The effect of solvent, base, temperature, time, catalyst loading and recyclability was also investigated. They also effectively catalyze the transfer hydrogenation reaction of various ketones with 2-propanol.
- Nandhini, Raja,Venkatachalam, Galmari
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- Amidation of aldehydes using mono-cationic half-sandwich rhodium(III) complexes with functionalized phenylhydrazone ligands
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A series of mono-cationic half-sandwich rhodium(III) complexes have been synthesized in methanol using phenylhydrazone-derived ligands (L1–L6) and the starting precursor [(η5-C5Me5)2Rh2(μ-Cl)2Cl2] in a 2:1 molar ratio. The N,N′-phenylhydrazone complexes have been isolated as tetraphenylborate salts. All complexes were characterized by elemental analysis, FT-IR, UV–visible, NMR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. The molecular structure of complex [(η5-C5Me5)Rh(L1)Cl](BPh4) (1) was confirmed by single-crystal X-ray structure analysis. Complex [(η5-C5Me5)Rh(L3)Cl](BPh4) (3) was used as an efficient catalyst for the amide formation reaction, with up to 99% conversion after 2 h in toluene at 110 °C in the presence of hydroxyl amine hydrochloride and sodium bicarbonate.
- Devika, Neelakandan,Ananthalakshmi, Subbiah,Raja, Nandhagopal,Gupta, Gajendra,Therrien, Bruno
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