451-82-1Relevant articles and documents
Visible-Light-Enabled Carboxylation of Benzyl Alcohol Derivatives with CO2 Using a Palladium/Iridium Dual Catalyst
Iwasawa, Nobuharu,Jin, Yushu,Toriumi, Naoyuki
, (2021/12/14)
A highly efficient carboxylation of benzyl alcohol derivatives with CO2 using a palladium/iridium dual catalyst under visible-light irradiation was developed. A wide range of benzyl alcohol derivatives could be employed to provide benzylic carboxylic acids in moderate to high yields. Mechanistic studies indicated that the oxidative addition of benzyl alcohol derivatives was possibly the rate-determining-step. It was also found that a switchable site-selective carboxylation between benzylic C?O and aryl C?Cl moieties could be achieved simply by changing the palladium catalyst.
Electrogenerated Sm(II)-Catalyzed CO2 Activation for Carboxylation of Benzyl Halides
Bazzi, Sakna,Schulz, Emmanuelle,Mellah, Mohamed
supporting information, p. 10033 - 10037 (2019/12/24)
Sm(II)-catalyzed carboxylation of benzyl halides is reported through the electrochemical reduction of CO2. The transformation proceeds under mild reaction conditions to afford the corresponding phenylacetic acids in good to excellent yields. This user-friendly and operationally simple protocol represents an alternative to traditional strategies, which usually proceeds through the C(sp3)-halide activation pathway.
A General, Activator-Free Palladium-Catalyzed Synthesis of Arylacetic and Benzoic Acids from Formic Acid
Wang, Lin,Neumann, Helfried,Beller, Matthias
supporting information, p. 6910 - 6914 (2018/06/04)
A new catalyst for the carboxylative synthesis of arylacetic and benzoic acids using formic acid (HCOOH) as the CO surrogate was developed. In an improvement over previous work, CO is generated in situ without the need for any additional activators. Key to success was the use of a specific system consisting of palladium acetate and 1,2-bis((tert-butyl(2-pyridinyl)phosphinyl)methyl)benzene. The generality of this method is demonstrated by the synthesis of more than 30 carboxylic acids, including non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), under mild conditions in good yields.