491-35-0Relevant articles and documents
A novel approach to vapor-phase synthesis of 2- and 4-methylquinoline from lactic acid and aniline
Li, An,Huang, Chen,Luo, Cai-Wu,Li, Li-Jun,Yi, Wen-Jun,Liu, Tian-Wei,Chao, Zi-Sheng
, p. 13 - 16 (2017)
A novel and green route for vapor-phase synthesis of 2- and 4-methylquinoline was provided in this work, in which lactic acid as one of the reactants was for the first time employed. Various influencing factors, including types of catalysts, reaction temperature and stability of catalyst were investigated systematically. The results showed that a 67.6% total yield of quinolines was obtained over the HBeta catalyst. The characterization by using BET, NH3-TPD and pyridine-IR techniques revealed that strong Br?nsted acid sites are favorable for generation of 2- and 4-methylquinoline whereas Lewis acid sites could increase the proportion of 4-methylquinoline in target products. Besides, a feasible reaction pathway to synthesize 2- and 4-methylquinoline was proposed on the basis of the reaction products.
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Tsuchiya,Kurita
, p. 419 (1976)
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Method for realizing oxidative dehydrogenation of nitrogen-containing heterocyclic ring by using biomass-based carbon material
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Paragraph 0010-0011; 0014-0015, (2021/06/26)
The invention provides a method for realizing oxidative dehydrogenation of a nitrogen-containing heterocyclic ring by using a biomass-based carbon material, and belongs to the field of organic synthesis. According to the method, the raw materials of the biomass-based carbon material comprise wheat, sorghum, rice, corn straw, wheat straw, peanut shells, sesame shells, bean shells and the like, and are crushed and then ground into powder, the powder is fully mixed with an inorganic alkali, and calcination is performed in an inert gas atmosphere to prepare the biomass-based carbon material; and by using air as an oxygen source, at a temperature of 50-120 DEG C, oxidative dehydrogenation of nitrogen-containing heterocyclic compounds to synthesize quinoline compounds, isoquinoline compounds, acridine compounds, quinazoline compounds, indole compounds, imine compounds, and even quinoline compounds with pharmaceutical activity can be achieved. According to the present invention, easily available wheat flour is adopted as a raw material to prepare a non-metal catalyst, the alkali is not added during the reaction process, and a remarkable industrial application prospect is achieved.
Metal–Organic Layers Hierarchically Integrate Three Synergistic Active Sites for Tandem Catalysis
Quan, Yangjian,Lan, Guangxu,Shi, Wenjie,Xu, Ziwan,Fan, Yingjie,You, Eric,Jiang, Xiaomin,Wang, Cheng,Lin, Wenbin
supporting information, p. 3115 - 3120 (2020/12/09)
We report the design of a bifunctional metal–organic layer (MOL), Hf12-Ru-Co, composed of [Ru(DBB)(bpy)2]2+ [DBB-Ru, DBB=4,4′-di(4-benzoato)-2,2′-bipyridine; bpy=2,2′-bipyridine] connecting ligand as a photosensitizer and Co(dmgH)2(PPA)Cl (PPA-Co, dmgH=dimethylglyoxime; PPA=4-pyridinepropionic acid) on the Hf12 secondary building unit (SBU) as a hydrogen-transfer catalyst. Hf12-Ru-Co efficiently catalyzed acceptorless dehydrogenation of indolines and tetrahydroquinolines to afford indoles and quinolones. We extended this strategy to prepare Hf12-Ru-Co-OTf MOL with a [Ru(DBB)(bpy)2]2+ photosensitizer and Hf12 SBU capped with triflate as strong Lewis acids and PPA-Co as a hydrogen transfer catalyst. With three synergistic active sites, Hf12-Ru-Co-OTf competently catalyzed dehydrogenative tandem transformations of indolines with alkenes or aldehydes to afford 3-alkylindoles and bisindolylmethanes with turnover numbers of up to 500 and 460, respectively, illustrating the potential use of MOLs in constructing novel multifunctional heterogeneous catalysts.
Visible-light-mediated organoboron-catalysed metal-free dehydrogenation of N-heterocycles using molecular oxygen
Wei, Lanfeng,Wei, Yu,Xu, Liang,Zhang, Jinli
supporting information, p. 4446 - 4450 (2021/06/30)
The surge of photocatalytic transformation not only provides unprecedented synthetic methods, but also triggers the enthusiasm for more sustainable photocatalysts. On the other hand, oxygen is an ideal oxidant in terms of atom economy and environmental friendliness. However, the poor reactivity of oxygen at the ground state makes its utilization challenging. Herein, a visible-light-induced oxidative dehydrogenative process is disclosed, which uses an organoboron compound as the photocatalyst and molecular oxygen as the sole oxidant.Viathis approach, an array of N-heterocycles have been accessed under metal-free mild conditions, in good to excellent yields.