539-48-0Relevant articles and documents
p-Xylylenediamine and new polyimides derived from it
Zhubanov,Abil'din,Bizhanova,Zhubanov,Kravtsova
, p. 1304 - 1309 (2003)
p-Xylylenediamine was prepared by hydrogenation of terephthalodinitrile; the conditions ensuring high yield of this monomer were found. The influence exerted by the catalyst and solvent on the diamine yield was examined. Single-step polycondensation of p-xylylenediamine with tricyclodecenetetracarboxylic dianhydrides in the presence of catalytic amounts of isonicotinic acid gave a series of new polyimides consisting of aliphatic and aromatic fragments.
Modulating: Trans -imination and hydrogenation towards the highly selective production of primary diamines from dialdehydes
Hao, Rui,Li, Lin,Liu, Fei,Qi, Haifeng,Su, Yang,Wang, Aiqin,Yang, Jingyi,Zhang, Leilei,Zhang, Tao
, p. 6897 - 6901 (2020/11/09)
Bio-based primary diamines are important building blocks for sustainable bio-polymers, but their synthesis remains challenging due to the high susceptibility to polymerization. Herein, we have developed a new strategy to suppress the polymerization by employing a more nucleophilic alkylamine to scavenge the dialdehyde and a Co/ZrO2 catalyst to regulate the trans-imination and hydrogenation activity. With this strategy, 2,5-bis(aminomethyl)furan (BAMF), a promising monomer for the production of new polyamides and polyureas, is successfully synthesized via the reductive amination of biomass-derived 2,5-diformylfuran (DFF) under a H2 and NH3 atmosphere with an unprecedentedly high selectivity up to 95%. This strategy is applicable to the reductive amination of other biomass-derived dialdehydes, thus paving a new way to bio-based diamine monomers. This journal is
Green and convenient protocols for the efficient reduction of nitriles and nitro compounds to corresponding amines with NaBH4 in water catalyzed by magnetically retrievable CuFe2O4 nanoparticles
Zeynizadeh, Behzad,Mohammad Aminzadeh, Farkhondeh,Mousavi, Hossein
, (2019/03/23)
Abstract: In this study, firstly, CuFe2O4 nanoparticles were prepared by a simple operation. The structure of the mentioned nanoparticles was characterized by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectrometry, vibrating sample magnetometer and also Brunauer–Emmett–Teller and Barrett–Joyner–Halenda analyses. The prepared magnetically copper ferrite nanocomposite was successfully applied as a simple, cost-effective, practicable, and recoverable catalyst on the green, highly efficient, fast, base-free, and ligand-free reduction of nitriles and also on the affordable and eco-friendly reduction of nitro compounds with the broad substrate scope to the corresponding amines with NaBH4 in water at reflux in high to excellent yields. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.].