6624-53-9Relevant articles and documents
A Solid-Phase Assisted Flow Approach to In Situ Wittig-Type Olefination Coupling
Aldrich-Wright, Janice R.,Dankers, Christian,Gordon, Christopher P.,Polyzos, Anastasios,Tadros, Joseph
supporting information, p. 4184 - 4194 (2021/08/24)
Described herein is the development of a continuous flow, solid-phase triphenylphosphine (PS-PPh3) assisted protocol to facilitate the in situ coupling of reciprocal pairs of halogen and carbonyl functionalised molecular pairs by a Wittig olefination within 15 mins. The protocol entails injecting a single solution (1 : 1 CHCl3 : EtOH) containing the halogenated and carbonyl-based substrates into a continuously flowing stream of CHCl3 : EtOH (1 : 1), passed through a fixed bed of K2CO3 and PS-PPh3. With advancement to the previous PS-PPh3 coupling procedures, the method employs a traditional polystyrene-based immobilisation matrix, the substrate scope of the protocol extended to substituted ketones, secondary alkyl chlorides, and an unprotected maleimide scaffold.
Palladium supported aminobenzamide modified silica coated superparamagnetic iron oxide as an applicable nanocatalyst for Heck cross-coupling reaction
Fatahi, Yousef,Ghaempanah, Aram,Ma?mani, Leila,Mahdavi, Mohammad,Bahadorikhalili, Saeed
, (2021/01/26)
An applicable palladium-based nanocatalyst was constructed through the immobilization of palladium onto 2-aminobenzamide functionalized silica coated superparamagnetic iron oxide magnetic nanoparticles. The nanocatalyst (named as Pd@ABA@SPIONs@SiO2) was characterized by several characterization methods, including scanning electron microscope (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), vibrating-sample magnetometry (VSM), energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS), dynamic light scattering (DLS), X-ray powder diffraction (XRD), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), inductively coupled plasma (ICP), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analyses. Microscopy results showed that the nanoparticles are spherical in shape with 20–25 nm size. The size of the nanoparticles was confirmed by the DLS method. The superparamagnetic nature of the catalyst was confirmed by the VSM method. The successful functionalization of SPIONs@SiO2 was confirmed by FT-IR spectroscopy. The presence of palladium in the structure of the nanocatalyst was illustrated by XRD and EDS analysis. Also using XPS technique, the oxidation state of palladium in Pd@ABA@SPIONs@SiO2 was determined zero before and after the catalyst was applied in Mizoroki-Heck reaction. Several aryl halides and alkenes were reacted in the presence of the nanocatalyst and formed the corresponding products in high isolated yields. The nanocatalyst showed very good reusability and did not decrease its activity after 10 sequential runs. Density functional theory (DFT) calculation was performed to provide a mechanism for the reaction and confirmed the role of the palladium catalyst in the reaction function.
Green and sustainable palladium nanomagnetic catalyst stabilized by glucosamine-functionalized Fe3O4@SiO2 nanoparticles for Suzuki and Heck reactions
Eslahi, Hassan,Sardarian, Ali Reza,Esmaeilpour, Mohsen
, (2021/04/26)
A novel magnetic and heterogeneous palladium-based catalyst stabilized by glucosamine-functionalized magnetic Fe3O4@SiO2 nanoparticle was synthesized. The strategy relies on the covalently bonding of glucosamine to cyanuric chloride-functionalized magnetic nanoparticles followed by complexation with palladium. The structure of magnetic nanocatalyst was fully determined by FT-IR, XRD, DLS, FE-SEM, TEM, ICP, UV-Vis, TGA, VSM, and EDX. The obtained results confirmed that the palladium nanoparticles stabilized by glucosamine immobilized onto the magnetic support exhibited high activity in cross-coupling reactions of Suzuki-Miyaura and Mizoroki-Heck. Various aryl halides were coupled with arylboronic acid (Suzuki cross-coupling reaction) and olefins (Heck reactions) under the green conditions to provide corresponding products in high to excellent yields. Interestingly, the catalyst can be easily isolated from the reaction media by magnetic decantation and can subsequently be applied for consecutive reaction cycles (at least seven times) with no notable reduction in the catalytic activity.