109-76-2Relevant articles and documents
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Aspinall
, p. 2843 (1941)
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OXIDATION OF POLYAMINES BY PYRROLOQUINOLINE QUINONE (PQQ)
Houen, G.,Larsen, C.,Larsson, L.-I.
, p. 4235 - 4242 (1989)
Pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) was found to oxidize the polyamines spermine and spermidine in stoichiometric amounts with diaminopropane as the main product identified by reversed phase high performance liquid chromatography and mass spectroscopy of the reaction products.Putrescine was oxidized much slower than the polyamines and cetyl-trimethyl-ammonium bromide did not promote oxidation.A model for the PQQ oxidation of polyamines is suggested to account for these observations.
Cobalt-catalyzed amination of 1,3-propanediol: Effects of catalyst promotion and use of supercritical ammonia as solvent and reactant
Fischer,Maciejewski,Buergi,Mallat,Baiker
, p. 373 - 383 (1999)
The catalytic synthesis of 1,3-diaminopropane from 1,3-propanediol and ammonia was studied in a continuous fixed-bed reactor in the pressure range 50 to 150 bar. The unsupported Co-based catalysts applied were characterized by N2 physisorption, XRD, XPS, TPR, and ammonia adsorption using pulse thermal analysis and DRIFT spectroscopy. The latter investigations revealed that the best catalyst, 95 wt% Co-5 wt% Fe, contained only very weak acidic sites, unable to chemisorb ammonia. The absence of strong acidic and basic sites was crucial to suppress the various acid/base-catalyzed side reactions (retro-aldol reaction, hydrogenolysis, alkylation, disproportionation, dimerization, oligomerization). Other important requirements for improved diaminopropane formation were the use of excess ammonia (molar ratio NH3/diol > 20) and the presence of the metastable β-Co phase. A small amount of Fe additive could efficiently hinder the transformation of this phase into the thermodynamically stable α-Co phase and thus prevent catalyst deactivation up to 10 days on stream. Application of supercritical ammonia almost doubled the selectivity to amino alcohol and diamine. The selectivity enhancement in the near-critical region is attributed to elimination of the interphase mass transport limitations and to the resulting higher surface ammonia concentration.
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Evans,R.F.,Shannon,J.S.
, p. 1406 - 1412 (1965)
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Aluminum Metal-Organic Framework-Ligated Single-Site Nickel(II)-Hydride for Heterogeneous Chemoselective Catalysis
Antil, Neha,Kumar, Ajay,Akhtar, Naved,Newar, Rajashree,Begum, Wahida,Dwivedi, Ashutosh,Manna, Kuntal
, p. 3943 - 3957 (2021/04/12)
The development of chemoselective and heterogeneous earth-abundant metal catalysts is essential for environmentally friendly chemical synthesis. We report a highly efficient, chemoselective, and reusable single-site nickel(II) hydride catalyst based on robust and porous aluminum metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) (DUT-5) for hydrogenation of nitro and nitrile compounds to the corresponding amines and hydrogenolysis of aryl ethers under mild conditions. The nickel-hydride catalyst was prepared by the metalation of aluminum hydroxide secondary building units (SBUs) of DUT-5 having the formula of Al(μ2-OH)(bpdc) (bpdc = 4,4′-biphenyldicarboxylate) with NiBr2 followed by a reaction with NaEt3BH. DUT-5-NiH has a broad substrate scope with excellent functional group tolerance in the hydrogenation of aromatic and aliphatic nitro and nitrile compounds under 1 bar H2 and could be recycled and reused at least 10 times. By changing the reaction conditions of the hydrogenation of nitriles, symmetric or unsymmetric secondary amines were also afforded selectively. The experimental and computational studies suggested reversible nitrile coordination to nickel followed by 1,2-insertion of coordinated nitrile into the nickel-hydride bond occurring in the turnover-limiting step. In addition, DUT-5-NiH is also an active catalyst for chemoselective hydrogenolysis of carbon-oxygen bonds in aryl ethers to afford hydrocarbons under atmospheric hydrogen in the absence of any base, which is important for the generation of fuels from biomass. This work highlights the potential of MOF-based single-site earth-abundant metal catalysts for practical and eco-friendly production of chemical feedstocks and biofuels.
Imprinted Apportionment of Functional Groups in Multivariate Metal-Organic Frameworks
Feng, Liang,Wang, Kun-Yu,Lv, Xiu-Liang,Powell, Joshua A.,Yan, Tian-Hao,Willman, Jeremy,Zhou, Hong-Cai
supporting information, p. 14524 - 14529 (2019/10/02)
Sophisticated chemical processes widely observed in biological cells require precise apportionment regulation of building units, which inspires researchers to develop tailorable architectures with controllable heterogeneity for replication, recognition and information storage. However, it remains a substantial challenge to endow multivariate materials with internal sequences and controllable apportionments. Herein, we introduce a novel strategy to manipulate the apportionment of functional groups in multivariate metal-organic frameworks (MTV-MOFs) by preincorporating interlocked linkers into framework materials. As a proof of concept, the imprinted apportionment of functional groups within ZIF-8 was achieved by exchanging imine-based linker templates with original linkers initially. The removal of linker fragments by hydrolysis can be achieved via postsynthetic labilization, leading to the formation of architectures with controlled heterogeneity. The distributions of functional groups in the resulting imprinted MOFs can be tuned by judicious control of the interlocked chain length, which was further analyzed by computational methods. This work provides synthetic tools for precise control of pore environment and functionality sequences inside multicomponent materials.
Applications of dynamic combinatorial chemistry for the determination of effective molarity
Ciaccia, Maria,Tosi, Irene,Baldini, Laura,Cacciapaglia, Roberta,Mandolini, Luigi,Di Stefano, Stefano,Hunter, Christopher A.
, p. 144 - 151 (2015/02/19)
A new strategy for determining thermodynamic effective molarities (EM) for macrocylisation reactions using dynamic combinatorial chemistry under dilute conditions is presented. At low concentrations, below the critical value, Dynamic Libraries (DLs) of bifunctional building blocks contain only cyclic species, so it is not possible to quantify the equilibria between linear and cyclic species. However, addition of a monofunctional chain stopper can be used to promote the formation of linear oligomers allowing measurement of EM for all cyclic species present in the DL. The effectiveness of this approach was demonstrated for DLs generated from mixtures of 1,3-diimine calix[4]arenes, linear diaminoalkanes and monoaminoalkanes. For macrocycles deriving from one bifunctional calixarene and one diamine, there is an alternating pattern of EM values with the number of methylene units in the diamine: odd numbers give significantly higher EMs than even numbers. For odd numbers of methylene units, the alkyl chain can adopt an extended all anti conformation, whereas for even numbers of methylene units, gauche conformations are required for cyclisation, and the associated strain reduces EM. The value of EM for the five-carbon linker indicates that this macrocycle is a strainless ring. This journal is