- Alcoholysis and carbonyl hydrosilylation reactions using a polymer- supported trialkylsilane
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Polystyrene-diethylsilane (PS-DES) resin may be reacted with alcohols (alcoholysis) and carbonyl compounds (hydrosilylation) in 1-methyl-2- pyrrolidinone (NMP) using Wilkinson's catalyst (RhCl(PPh3)3) to afford the corresponding resin-bound silyl ethers. The silyl ethers formed were effectively cleaved using HF/pyridine solution in THF. Methoxytrimethylsilane was employed to scavenge excess HF from product solutions.
- Hu, Yonghan,Porco Jr., John A.
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- Pentacoordinate Hydridosiliconates with Bidentate Ligands Derived from Hexafluorocumyl Alcohol. Characterization and Reduction of Carbonyl Compounds
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Pentacoordinate hydridosiliconates were prepared via the reaction of trichlorosilane with dilithiated hexafluorocumyl alcohol and characterized spectroscopically.The facile reduction of carbonyl compounds with the siliconates is indicative of the highly activated Si-H bond in the anionic hydridosiliconates.
- Kira, Mitsuo,Sato, Kazuhiko,Sakurai, Hideki
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- Covalent grafting of cobalt carbonyl cluster on functionalized mesoporous SBA- 15 molecular sieve and its applications towards hydroformylation of 1-octene
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Cobalt carbonyl cluster was anchored through a facile route on the surface of organo-functionalized SBA-15 molecular sieve by post-synthetic approach. The successful grafting of organofunctional ligand and cobalt carbonyl cluster was evident thorough 29Si-MAS NMR, 13C-MAS NMR and FT-IR studies. The resultant cobalt clusters anchored functionalized SBA-15 material (SBA-15-RCo) showed promising catalytic activity on hydroformylation of 1-octene (97% conversion) with excellent selective towards hydroformylated products (90%).
- Ahmed, Maqsood,Sakthivel, Ayyamperumal
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Read Online
- Development of a ruthenium/Phosphite catalyst system for domino hydroformylation-reduction of olefins with carbon dioxide
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An efficient domino ruthenium-catalyzed reverse water-gas-shift (RWGS)-hydroformylation-reduction reaction of olefins to alcohols is reported. Key to success is the use of specific bulky phosphite ligands and triruthenium dodecacarbonyl as the catalyst. Compared to the known ruthenium/chloride system, the new catalyst allows for a more efficient hydrohydroxymethylation of terminal and internal olefins with carbon dioxide at lower temperature. Unwanted hydrogenation of the substrate is prevented. Preliminary mechanism investigations uncovered the homogeneous nature of the active catalyst and the influence of the ligand and additive in individual steps of the reaction sequence.
- Liu, Qiang,Wu, Lipeng,Fleischer, Ivana,Selent, Detlef,Franke, Robert,Jackstell, Ralf,Beller, Matthias
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Read Online
- Tandem hydroformylation/hydrogenation over novel immobilized Rh-containing catalysts based on tertiary amine-functionalized hybrid inorganic-organic materials
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Non-phosphorous rhodium-containing catalysts for direct conversion of olefins to alcohols via tandem hydroformylation/hydrogenation have been designed and synthesized. Interaction between Rh(acac)(CO)2 and tertiary amino groups on the surface of mesoporous hybrid organic-inorganic supports yielded materials which were successfully used in the tandem process. Data obtained for a selected catalyst KN demonstrate that rhodium is in the Rh+1 state highly dispersed on the surface and is bonded with nitrogen atoms both before and after use. Evaluation of the catalytic performance shows high activity (hydroformylation TOF 312 h?1), chemoselectivity and stable hydroformylation yield at least in the first 5 cycles with a decrease in alcohol selectivity. The influence of temperature, reaction time, total pressure, and molar CO/H2 ratio of syngas on oxygenate yields is described. Type of the hydroformylation active sites and possible pathways for the observed decrease in hydrogenation are discussed.
- Gorbunov, Dmitry,Karakhanov, Eduard,Maximov, Anton,Naranov, Evgeny,Nenasheva, Maria,Rosenberg, Edward
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- Iridium-Catalyzed Domino Hydroformylation/Hydrogenation of Olefins to Alcohols: Synergy of Two Ligands
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A novel one-pot iridium-catalyzed domino hydroxymethylation of olefins, which relies on using two different ligands at the same time, is reported. DFT computation reveals different activities for the individual hydroformylation and hydrogenation steps in the presence of mono- and bidentate ligands. Whereas bidentate ligands have higher hydrogenation activity, monodentate ligands show higher hydroformylation activity. Accordingly, a catalyst system is introduced that uses dual ligands in the whole domino process. Control experiments show that the overall selectivity is kinetically controlled. Both computation and experiment explain the function of the two optimized ligands during the domino process.
- Beller, Matthias,Huang, Weiheng,Jackstell, Ralf,Jiao, Haijun,Tian, Xinxin
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supporting information
(2022/01/13)
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- Method for producing a shaped catalyst body
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Provided herein is a novel process for producing shaped catalyst bodies in which a mixture having aluminum contents of Al±0 in the range from 80 to 99.8% by weight, based on the mixture used, is used to form a specific intermetallic phase, shaped catalyst bodies obtainable by the process of the invention, a process for producing an active catalyst fixed bed including the shaped catalyst bodies provided herein, the active catalyst fixed beds and also the use of these active catalyst fixed beds for the hydrogenation of organic hydrogenatable compounds or for formate degradation.
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Page/Page column 29-30
(2021/11/19)
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- Ruthenium-catalysed domino hydroformylation-hydrogenation-esterification of olefins
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A novel catalytic domino reductive hydroformylation-esterification of olefins is reported. The optimal protocol makes use of an inexpensive Ru carbonyl catalyst and uses acetic acid as both solvent and reactant. In general, moderate to good yields are obtained using aliphatic or aromatic olefins including industrially relevant di-isobutene. This atom-efficient catalytic transformation provides straightforward access to various acetate esters from unfunctionalized olefins.
- Beller, Matthias,Dühren, Ricarda,Franke, Robert,Jackstell, Ralf,Kucmierczyk, Peter,Schneider, Carolin
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p. 5777 - 5780
(2021/09/10)
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- Directing Selectivity to Aldehydes, Alcohols, or Esters with Diphobane Ligands in Pd-Catalyzed Alkene Carbonylations
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Phenylene-bridged diphobane ligands with different substituents (CF3, H, OMe, (OMe)2, tBu) have been synthesized and applied as ligands in palladium-catalyzed carbonylation reactions of various alkenes. The performance of these ligands in terms of selectivity in hydroformylation versus alkoxycarbonylation has been studied using 1-hexene, 1-octene, and methyl pentenoates as substrates, and the results have been compared with the ethylene-bridged diphobane ligand (BCOPE). Hydroformylation of 1-octene in the protic solvent 2-ethyl hexanol results in a competition between hydroformylation and alkoxycarbonylation, whereby the phenylene-bridged ligands, in particular, the trifluoromethylphenylene-bridged diphobane L1 with an electron-withdrawing substituent, lead to ester products via alkoxycarbonylation, whereas BCOPE gives predominantly alcohol products (n-nonanol and isomers) via reductive hydroformylation. The preference of BCOPE for reductive hydroformylation is also seen in the hydroformylation of 1-hexene in diglyme as the solvent, producing heptanol as the major product, whereas phenylene-bridged ligands show much lower activities in this case. The phenylene-bridged ligands show excellent performance in the methoxycarbonylation of 1-octene to methyl nonanoate, significantly better than BCOPE, the opposite trend seen in hydroformylation activity with these ligands. Studies on the hydroformylation of functionalized alkenes such as 4-methyl pentenoate with phenylene-bridged ligands versus BCOPE showed that also in this case, BCOPE directs product selectivity toward alcohols, while phenylene-bridge diphobane L2 favors aldehyde formation. In addition to ligand effects, product selectivities are also determined by the nature and the amount of the acid cocatalyst used, which can affect substrate and aldehyde hydrogenation as well as double bond isomerization.
- Aitipamula, Srinivasulu,Britovsek, George J. P.,Nobbs, James D.,Tay, Dillon W. P.,Van Meurs, Martin
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p. 1914 - 1925
(2021/06/28)
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- Selective Production of Linear Aldehydes and Alcohols from Alkenes using Formic Acid as Syngas Surrogate
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Performing carbonylation without the use of carbon monoxide for high-value-added products is an attractive yet challenging topic in sustainable chemistry. Herein, effective methods for producing linear aldehydes or alcohols selectively with formic acid as both carbon monoxide and hydrogen source have been described. Linear-selective hydroformylation of alkenes proceeds smoothly with up to 88 % yield and >30 regioselectivity in the presence of single Rh catalyst. Strikingly, introducing Ru into the system, the dual Rh/Ru catalysts accomplish efficient and regioselective hydroxymethylation in one pot. The present processes utilizing formic acid as syngas surrogate operate simply under mild condition, which opens a sustainable way for production of linear aldehydes and alcohols without the need for gas cylinders and autoclaves. As formic acid can be readily produced via CO2 hydrogenation, the protocols represent indirect approaches for chemical valorization of CO2.
- Chen, Junjun,Hua, Kaimin,Liu, Xiaofang,Deng, Yuchao,Wei, Baiyin,Wang, Hui,Sun, Yuhan
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p. 9919 - 9924
(2021/05/31)
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- Synthesis of Branched Biolubricant Base Oil from Oleic Acid
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The mature manufacturing of synthetic lubricants (poly-α-olefins, PAO) proceeds through oligomerization, polymerization, and hydrogenation reactions of petrochemical ethylene. In this work, we utilize the inexpensive bio-derived oleic acid as raw material to synthesize a crotch-type C45 biolubricant base oil via a full-carbon chain synthesis without carbon loss. It contains several cascade chemical processes: oxidation of oleic acid to azelaic acid (further esterification to dimethyl azelate) and nonanoic acid (both C9 chains). The latter is then selectively hydrogenated to nonanol and brominated to the bromo-Grignard reagent. In a next step, a C45 biolubricant base oil is formed by nucleophilic addition (NPA) of excessive C9 bromo-Grignard reagent with dimethyl azelate, followed by subsequent hydrodeoxygenation. The specific properties of the prepared biolubricant base oil are almost equivalent to those of the commercial lubricant PAO6 (ExxonMobil). This process provides a new promising route for the production of value-added biolubricant base oils.
- Chen, Shuang,Wu, Tingting,Zhao, Chen
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p. 5516 - 5522
(2020/09/07)
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- In-Situ generation of surface-active HCo(CO)y like intermediate from gold supported on ion-promoted Co3O4 for induced hydroformylation-hydrogenation of alkenes to alcohols
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In this study, a greener and stable surface-active cobalt-carbonyl like specie [HCo(CO)y] was generated via H2 and CO spillover by gold on ion-promoted cobalt oxide. The supports and catalysts syntheses were based on inverse micelle and deposition-precipitation methods, respectively. The temperature-programmed reduction was used for optimization to obtain the best supports. The catalysts with activity (Co3O4 3O4 3O4 and Au loadings 10 percent 3O4 catalyst more active than the others and displayed excellent alcohol chemoselectivity with varying regioselectivity under milder reaction conditions. The reaction was assumed to take place via the formation of [HCo(CO)y] specie, as the active catalytic site of the catalyst. The enhanced catalytic performance was also ascribed to the low-temperature reducibility and surface basicity of the nanomaterials. The stability of the catalyst was evaluated by recycling, with its mesostructure retained after four cycles.
- Akinnawo, Christianah A.,Meijboom, Reinout,Mogudi, Batsile M.,Oseghale, Charles O.
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- Ir-catalyzed tandem hydroformylation-transfer hydrogenation of olefins with (trans-/cis-)formic acid as hydrogen source in presence of 1,10-phenanthroline
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The one-pot tandem hydroformylation-reduction to synthesize alcohols from olefins is in great demand but suffering from low yields, poor selectivity and harsh condition. Herein, 1,10-phenanthroline (L1) modified Ir-catalyst proved to exhibit multiple cata
- Chen, Xiao-Chao,Gao, Han,Liu, Lei,Liu, Ye,Lu, Yong,Xia, Fei,Yang, Shu-Qing
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p. 183 - 193
(2020/04/08)
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- New strategy for production of primary alcohols from aliphatic olefins by tandem cross-metathesis/hydrogenation
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Primary alcohols are widely used in industry as solvents and precursors of detergents. The classic methods for hydration of terminal alkenes always produce the Markovnikov products. Herein, we reported a reliable approach to produce primary alcohols from terminal alkenes combining with biomass-derived allyl alcohol by tandem cross-metathesis/hydrogenation. A series of primary alcohol with different chain lengths was successfully produced in high yields (ca. 90percent). Computational studies revealed that self-metathesis and hydrogenation of substrates are accessible but much slower than cross-metathesis. This new methodology represents a unique alternative to primary alcohols from terminal alkenes.
- Jia, Ruilong,Zuo, Zhijun,Li, Xu,Liu, Lei,Dong, Jinxiang
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p. 1525 - 1529
(2019/11/11)
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- Bimetallic Paddlewheel-type Dirhodium(II,II) Acetate and Formamidinate Complexes: Synthesis, Structure, Electrochemistry, and Hydroformylation Activity
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Classical hydroformylation catalysts use mononuclear rhodium(I) complexes as precursors; however, very few examples of bimetallic systems have been reported. Herein, we report fully substituted dirhodium(II,II) complexes (C1-C6) containing acetate and diphenylformamidinate bridging ligands (L1-L4). The structure and geometry around these paddlewheel-type, bimetallic cores were confirmed by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The complexes C3-C6 show electrochemical redox reactions, with the expected reduction (Rh24+/3+) and two oxidation (Rh24+/5+ and Rh25+/6+) electron transfer processes. Furthermore, the bimetallic complexes were evaluated as catalyst precursors for the hydroformylation of 1-octene, with the acetate-containing complexes (C1 and C2) showing near quantitative conversion (>99%) of 1-octene, excellent activity and chemoselectivity toward aldehydes (>98%), with moderate regioselectivity toward linear products. Replacement of the acetate with diphenylformamidinate ligands (complexes C3-C6) yielded moderate-to-good chemoselectivity and regioselectivity, favoring linear aldehydes.
- Casimiro, Anna,De Doncker, Stephen,Kotze, Izak A.,Ngubane, Siyabonga,Smith, Gregory S.
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p. 12928 - 12940
(2020/09/15)
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- Gem-Dialkyl Effect in Diphosphine Ligands: Synthesis, Coordination Behavior, and Application in Pd-Catalyzed Hydroformylation
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A series of palladium complexes with C3-bridged bidentate bis(diphenylphosphino)propane ligands with substituents of varying steric bulk at the central carbon have been synthesized. The size of the gem-dialkyl substituents affects the C-C-C bond angles within the ligands and consequently the P-M-P ligand bite angles. A combination of solid-state X-ray diffraction (XRD) and density functional theory (DFT) studies has shown that an increase in substituent size results in a distortion of the 6-membered metal-ligand chair conformation toward a boat conformation, to avoid bond angle strain. The influence of the gem-dialkyl effect on the catalytic performance of the complexes in palladium-catalyzed hydroformylation of 1-octene has been investigated. While hydroformylation activity to nonanal decreases with increasing size of the gem-dialkyl substituents, a change in chemoselectivity toward nonanol via reductive hydroformylation is observed.
- Aitipamula, Srinivasulu,Britovsek, George J. P.,Nobbs, James D.,Romain, Charles,Tay, Dillon W. P.,Van Meurs, Martin,White, Andrew J. P.
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p. 663 - 671
(2020/01/02)
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- Hydrosilylation of carbonyl and carboxyl groups catalysed by Mn(i) complexes bearing triazole ligands
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Manganese(i) complexes bearing triazole ligands are reported as catalysts for the hydrosilylation of carbonyl and carboxyl compounds. The desired reaction proceeds readily at 80 °C within 3 hours at catalyst loadings as low as 0.25 to 1 mol%. Hence, good to excellent yields of alcohols could be obtained for a wide range of substrates including ketones, esters, and carboxylic acids illustrating the versatility of the metal/ligand combination.
- Martínez-Ferraté, Oriol,Chatterjee, Basujit,Werlé, Christophe,Leitner, Walter
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p. 6370 - 6378
(2019/11/20)
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- Catalytic Hydrogenation of Carboxamides with a Bifunctional Cp Ru Catalyst Bearing an Imidazol-2-ylidene with a Protic Aminoethyl Side Chain
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Synthesis of a Cp Ru complex bearing an NH 2 -functionalized N -heterocyclic carbene (C-N H) was achieved by treatment of CpRuBr(isoprene) with an equimolar amount of a silver complex, which was generated from Ag 2 O and 1-(2-aminoethyl)-3-methylimidazolium bromide, in CH 3 CN at room temperature. The new CpRuBr(C-N H) complex showed a higher catalytic performance than the related CpRuCl(P-N H) and CpRuCl(N-N H) complexes. In the reaction of N -arylcarboxamides, the amine products were obtained in satisfactory yields under mild temperature conditions.
- Ikariya, Takao,Kawano, Teruhiro,Kayaki, Yoshihito,Watari, Ryo
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p. 2542 - 2547
(2019/06/08)
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- Copper-Catalyzed Trifluoromethylation of Alkyl Bromides
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Copper oxidative addition into organohalides is a challenging two-electron process. In contrast, formal oxidative addition of copper to C sp2 carbon-bromine bonds can be accomplished by employing latent silyl radicals under photoredox conditions. This novel paradigm for copper oxidative addition has now been applied to a Cu-catalyzed cross-coupling of C sp3-bromides. Specifically, a copper/photoredox dual catalytic system for the coupling of alkyl bromides with trifluoromethyl groups is presented. This operationally simple and robust protocol successfully converts a variety of alkyl, allyl, benzyl, and heterobenzyl bromides into the corresponding alkyl trifluoromethanes.
- Kornfilt, David J.P.,Macmillan, David W.C.
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supporting information
p. 6853 - 6858
(2019/05/10)
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- Acid-Promoted Hydroformylative Synthesis of Alcohol with Carbon Dioxide by Heterobimetallic Ruthenium-Cobalt Catalytic System
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The acid-aided heterobimetallic ruthenium-cobalt catalytic system for the reductive hydroformylation with carbon dioxide was established. Various alkenes, including waste from biomass and petroleum industry, could be upgraded to valuable alcohols with this protocol. Acid-promoted reverse water-gas shift (RWGS), thereby accelerating the hydroformylative synthesis of alcohol. The theoretical computations revealed that acid promoted RWGS by facilitating the dehydroxylation of ruthenium hydroxy carbonyl intermediate.
- Zhang, Xuehua,Tian, Xinxin,Shen, Chaoren,Xia, Chungu,He, Lin
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p. 1986 - 1992
(2019/03/17)
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- Hydrofunctionalization of Olefins to Higher Aliphatic Alcohols via Visible-Light Photocatalytic Coupling
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Abstract: An atomically economical green protocol for the hydrofunctionalization of olefins to higher aliphatic alcohols with 100% anti-Markovnikov regioselectivity was developed via visible-light photocatalytic coupling. This method employs cheap, readily available and abundant methanol as both the C1 feedstock and the hydrogen source under visible light irradiation over CdS photocatalyst. A wide scope of olefin substrates could be hydrofunctionalized successfully to the corresponding higher alcohols with high selectivity. Besides alcohol, acetone and acetonitrile can also couple with olefins to generate the corresponding hydrofunctionalization products, suggesting promising potential industrial application. Graphical Abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.] Hydrofunctionalization of olefins to value-added chemicals with high selectivity was achieved via visible-light photocatalytic cross-coupling.
- Bao, Jingxian,Fan, Yonghui,Zhang, Shuyi,Zhong, Liangshu,Wu, Minghong,Sun, Yuhan
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- A unique structural distribution pattern discovered for the cerebrosides from starfish Asterias amurensis
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Cerebroside is an important family of the mono-glycosylated ceramides involved in the larger family of glycosphingolipid and sulfatide. Cerebroside is synthesized from ceramide by the transfer of glucose from UDP-glucose, and degraded back to ceramide, which plays an important role at the epidermis protecting interior of the body as a barrier. Because cerebroside is regarded as the source molecule of ceramide and is amphiphilic in nature, cerebroside is considered valuable as the ingredient of cosmetic lotion. Various sources can be considered as raw material of cerebrosides. Starfish is considered as one of such potent source. However, the structure of the ceramide part of cerebroside is not fully investigated. Therefore, the individual structures of cerebroside molecules need to be identified including sphingosine and fatty acyl group composition to assess the potential of the molecule. We investigated and determined the structures of cerebrosides in starfish Asterias amurensis using LC-MS, GC-MS, tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS), and 1H NMR. We also discovered a characteristic structure distribution that was divided into three major groups: 1) a group composed of a relatively long sphingosine (C22) and a short length of fatty acyl group (less than C16), 2) a group composed of a typical C18 sphingosine and long fatty acyl groups (greater than C23), and 3) a group composed of C18 sphingosine and fatty acyl groups with their length less than C18. The calculated Log P values of cerebrosides ranging from 9 to 11 covered about 80% of the molecules that were in the range of those used in cosmetics, thus showing the potential usefulness of starfish Asterias amurensis as a source of raw material for cerebrosides.
- Yamaguchi, Ryosuke,Kanie, Yoshimi,Kanie, Osamu,Shimizu, Yoshitaka
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p. 115 - 122
(2019/01/24)
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- Reductive-hydroformylation of 1-octene to nonanol using fibrous Co3O4 catalyst
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This work reports, reductive-hydroformylation of 1-octene to nonanol in the presence of fine fibrous cobalt oxide (Co3O4) nano-catalyst prepared via urea reduction method under phosphine-free and additive free condition. Co3O4 nano-catalyst was prepared by the wet chemical method and was characterized using various instrumental techniques like FEG-SEM, EDS, XRD, TPR and FTIR. The effects of various reaction parameters such as temperature, synthesis gas (CO/H2) pressure/ratio, catalyst loading, solvent and time were studied. The reaction was successfully achieved in tetrahydrofuran (THF) as the solvent medium. This reaction believed to takes place through the generation of HCox(CO)y active catalyst species. The Co3O4 nano-catalyst could be recycled up to three consecutive cycles.
- Bhagade, Sachin S.,Chaurasia, Shivkumar R.,Bhanage, Bhalchandra M.
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p. 147 - 152
(2017/09/06)
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- Hydrofunctionalization of olefins to value-added chemicals: Via photocatalytic coupling
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A green strategy was developed for the synthesis of various value-added chemicals using methanol, acetonitrile, acetic acid, acetone and ethyl acetate as the hydrogen source by coupling them with olefins over heterogeneous photocatalysts. A radical coupling mechanism was proposed for the hydrofunctionalization of olefins with methanol to higher aliphatic alcohols over the Pt/TiO2 catalyst as the model reaction. C-H bond cleavage and C-C bond formation between photogenerated radicals and terminal olefins were accomplished in a single reaction at high efficiency. Our approach is atomically economical with high anti-Markovnikov regioselectivity and promising application potential under mild reaction conditions.
- Fan, Yonghui,Li, Shenggang,Bao, Jingxian,Shi, Lei,Yang, Yanzhang,Yu, Fei,Gao, Peng,Wang, Hui,Zhong, Liangshu,Sun, Yuhan
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supporting information
p. 3450 - 3456
(2018/08/06)
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- Hydroaminomethylation in Aqueous Solvent Systems – An Efficient Pathway to Highly Functionalized Amines
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Tandem-catalyzed hydroaminomethylation is a useful tool for synthesizing linear amines from olefins and amines in an atom-efficient manner. To enable the coupling of highly functionalized, hydrosoluble amines with non-water-soluble olefins, this reaction must be transferred to aqueous biphasic solvent systems. In this work, we systematically evaluate reaction conditions to provide a selective hydroaminomethylation of 1-octene with diethanolamine as model substrates. Although water is both the condensation side product and the solvent, yields of 79% were achieved using a catalytic system consisting a rhodium precursor and a sulfonated diphosphine ligand. This approach was applied to other functionalized amines, proving this concept is a suitable tool for the catalytic alkylation of highly functionalized amines. (Figure presented.).
- Fa?bach, Thiemo A.,Sommer, Fridolin O.,Vorholt, Andreas J.
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p. 1473 - 1482
(2018/02/27)
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- Stabilization of NaBH4 in Methanol Using a Catalytic Amount of NaOMe. Reduction of Esters and Lactones at Room Temperature without Solvent-Induced Loss of Hydride
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Rapid reaction of NaBH4 with MeOH precludes its use as a solvent for large-scale ester reductions. We have now learned that a catalytic amount of NaOMe (5 mol %) stabilizes NaBH4 solutions in methanol at 25 °C and permits the use of these solutions for the reduction of esters to alcohols. The generality of this reduction method was demonstrated using 22 esters including esters of naturally occurring chiral γ-butyrolactone containing dicarboxylic acids. This method permits the chemoselective reductions of esters in the presence of cyano and nitro groups and the reductive cyclization of a pyrrolidinedione ester to a fused five-membered furo[2,3-b]pyrrole and a (-)-crispine A analogue in high optical and chemical yields. Lactones, aliphatic esters, aromatic esters containing electron-withdrawing groups, and heteroaryl esters are reduced more rapidly than aryl esters containing electron-donating groups. The 11B NMR spectrum of the NaOMe-stabilized NaBH4 solutions showed a minor quartet due to monomethoxyborohydride (NaBH3OMe) that persisted up to 18 h at 25 °C. We postulate that NaBH3OMe is probably the active reducing agent. In support of this hypothesis, the activation barrier for hydride transfer from BH3(OMe)- onto benzoic acid methyl ester was calculated as 18.3 kcal/mol.
- Prasanth,Joseph, Ebbin,Abhijith,Nair,Ibnusaud, Ibrahim,Raskatov, Jevgenij,Singaram, Bakthan
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p. 1431 - 1440
(2018/02/09)
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- MeOH or H2O as efficient additive to switch the reactivity of allylSmBr towards carbonyl compounds
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A variety of carbonyl compounds were treated by allylSmBr (allylSmBr) with MeOH as the cosolvent to have further insights on the previously reported reductive coupling of aryl ketones mediated by Sm/alkyl halide/MeOH. The results demonstrate that the real reducing species in Sm/alkyl halide/MeOH system should be allylSmBr, and MeOH has elegantly switched the reactivity of allylSmBr from being nucleophilic to being good reductive coupling reagent. Besides, H2O was also found to be a useful additive to realize the pinacol coupling of aliphatic aldehydes and ketones promoted by allylSmBr.
- Li, Jianyong,Niu, Qingsheng,Li, Shanchan,Sun, Yuehao,Zhou, Qian,Lv, Xin,Wang, Xiaoxia
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supporting information
p. 1250 - 1253
(2017/03/10)
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- Surface-Plasmon-Mediated Hydrogenation of Carbonyls Catalyzed by Silver Nanocubes under Visible Light
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Plasmonic nanoparticles are exciting and promising candidates for light-activated catalysis. We report herein the use of plasmonic nanocubes for the activation of molecular hydrogen and the hydrogenation of ketones and aldehydes via visible light irradiation at 405 nm, corresponding to the position of the plasmon band of the nanocubes, at 80 °C. Only 1 atm of molecular hydrogen is required to access, using catalytic amounts of silver, primary, and secondary alcohols, with complete chemoselectivty for C=O over C=C reduction. The resulting catalytic system was studied over a scope of 12 compounds. Exposure to other wavelengths, or absence of light failed to provide activity, thus proving a direct positive impact of the plasmonic excitation to the catalytic activity. By varying the irradiation intensity, we studied the relationship between plasmon band excitation and catalytic activity and propose a potential reaction mechanism involving plasmon-activated hot electrons. This study expands the scope of reactions catalyzed by free-standing plasmonic particles and sheds light on H2 activation by silver surfaces.
- Landry, Michael J.,Gellé, Alexandra,Meng, Beryl Y.,Barrett, Christopher J.,Moores, Audrey
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p. 6128 - 6133
(2017/09/15)
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- Production of Alcohols from Olefins via One-Pot Tandem Hydroformylation-Acetalization-Hydrogenolysis over Bifunctional Catalyst Merging RuIII-P Complex and RuIII Lewis Acid
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A novel three-step tandem hydroformylation-acetalization-hydrogenolysis was first proposed to produce alcohols (derivatives) from olefins, and the developed unique Ru(III)-complex [Ru(III)-L2] ligated by the ionic diphosphine (L2) proved efficient toward this tandem reaction. In Ru(III)-L2, the strong π-acceptor nature of L2 guaranteed Ru-center remaining in +3 valence state without redox reaction. Hence, Ru(III)-L2 was able to behave as a bifunctional catalyst merging RuIII-P complex and RuIII Lewis acid, which acted not only as a transition metal catalyst responsible for hydroformylation of olefins and hydrogenolysis of (hemi)acetals but also as a Ru3+ Lewis acid in charge of acetalization of aldehydes [to form (hemi)acetals]. The easily performed acetalization served as a bridge step to get through the pathway from aldehydes to alcohols instead of the direct hydrogenation.
- Wang, Peng,Wang, Dong-Liang,Liu, Huan,Zhao, Xiao-Li,Lu, Yong,Liu, Ye
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p. 2404 - 2411
(2017/07/15)
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- Alkyl Formate Ester Synthesis by a Fungal Baeyer–Villiger Monooxygenase
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We investigated Baeyer–Villiger monooxygenase (BVMO)-mediated synthesis of alkyl formate esters, which are important flavor and fragrance products. A recombinant fungal BVMO from Aspergillus flavus was found to transform a selection of aliphatic aldehydes into alkyl formates with high regioselectivity. Near complete conversion of 10 mm octanal was achieved within 8 h with a regiomeric excess of ~80 %. Substrate concentration was found to affect specific activity and regioselectivity of the BVMO, as well as the rate of product autohydrolysis to the primary alcohol. More than 80 % conversion of 50 mm octanal was reached after 72 h (TTN nearly 20 000). Biotransformation on a 200 mL scale under unoptimized conditions gave a space-time yield (STY) of 4.2 g L?1 d?1 (3.4 g L?1 d?1 extracted product).
- Ferroni, Felix Martin,Tolmie, Carmien,Smit, Martha Sophia,Opperman, Diederik Johannes
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p. 515 - 517
(2017/03/22)
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- Ligand, metal complex containing ligand, and reaction using metal complex containing ligand
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A hydrogen transfer reaction may be more efficiently promoted by using a metal complex represented by Formula (2): (wherein, R1 to R8 are the same or different, and each represents a hydrogen atom, a substituted or unsubstituted alkyl group or the like; or wherein; R1 and R2, R2 and R3, R3 and R4, R4 and R5, and R5 and R6 are respectively bonded to each other to form a bivalent hydrocarbon group; R9 are the same or different, and each represents an alkyl group or cycloalkyl group; M is ruthenium (Ru) or the like; X is a ligand; and n is 0, 1 or 2). More specifically, the metal complex enables a hydrogenation reaction of various substrates having a stable carbonyl group or the like to be advanced with a high yield under mild conditions.
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Page/Page column 46-50
(2016/10/31)
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- ALKANE OXIDATION BY MODIFIED HYDROXYLASES
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This invention relates to modified hydroxylases. The invention further relates to cells expressing such modified hydroxylases and methods of producing hydroxylated alkanes by contacting a suitable substrate with such cells.
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Paragraph 0339
(2016/02/16)
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- HOMOGENEOUS HYDROGENATION OF ESTERS EMPLOYING A COMPLEX OF IRON AS CATALYST
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The homogeneous hydrogenation of organic carbonyls, especially esters, under relatively mild conditions using iron hydrido-borohydride catalyst complexes having amino-phosphine pincer ligands. The catalyst and process are well-suited for catalyzing the hydrogenation of a wide variety of organic carbonyls, such as hydrogenation of fatty acid esters to alcohols. In particular embodiments, the process can be carried out in the absence of solvent.
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Page/Page column 9
(2015/11/02)
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- METHOD FOR MANUFACTURING ALCOHOL BY HYDROGENATION OF CARBOXYLIC ACID COMPOUND AND ESTER COMPOUND
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PROBLEM TO BE SOLVED: To provide a method for obtaining alcohol by hydrogenation of carboxylic acid compound efficiently by using a homogeneous system catalyst, especially a method for obtaining alcohol by hydrogenation of various carboxylic acid compound and ester compound by the homogeneous system catalyst efficiently even under alleviation condition. SOLUTION: A carboxylic acid compound and/or an ester compound is hydrogenated in a presence of a rhenium complex represented by ReXmYnZp, where X is a halogen atom, Y is same or different and each a ligand containing one or more phosphorus atom, Z is a ligand other than X and Y, m is an integer of 1 to 6, p is an integer of 0 to 2 and the sum of m, n and p is an integer of 2 to 6, and a specific alkali metal salt. COPYRIGHT: (C)2015,JPOandINPIT
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Paragraph 0117; 0118; 0127; 0129; 0130
(2016/10/10)
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- METHOD FOR PRODUCING ORGANIC COMPOUND
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PROBLEM TO BE SOLVED: To provide a method of subjecting a compound having on one carbon atom a carbon atom constituting a carbon-carbon double bond and a functional group such as a hydroxyl group to a reductive reaction condition and producing an organic compound having the functional group substituted with a hydrogen atom. SOLUTION: There is provided a method for producing a compound represented by a formula (50) from a raw material compound represented by a formula (10). The method includes a step of irradiating a reaction system with light, the reaction system comprising the raw material compound, a hydrogen source compound, and a catalyst having a palladium component supported by a carrier containing titanium oxide. (R11 to R15 are a hydrogen atom, a hydrocarbon group having 1 to 40 carbon atoms which may have a cyclic structure or a derivative group thereof, or a heteroatom-containing group having 1 to 20 carbon atoms which may have a cyclic structure or a derivative group thereof; and R16 is a hydrogen atom, a hydrocarbon group having 1 to 40 carbon atoms or an acyl group having 1 to 20 carbon atoms which may have a cyclic structure, or -CH(CH2OH)2).) COPYRIGHT: (C)2015,JPO&INPIT
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Paragraph 0113-0115
(2018/10/16)
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- METHOD FOR MANUFACTURING ALCOHOL BY HYDROGENATION OF CARBOXYLIC ACID COMPOUND, RUTHENIUM COMPLEX USED FOR MANUFACTURING METHOD
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PROBLEM TO BE SOLVED: To provide a method for obtaining alcohol by hydrogenation of carboxylic acid compound efficiently by using a homogeneous system catalyst, especially a method for obtaining alcohol by hydrogenation of various carboxylic acid compound by the homogeneous system catalyst efficiently even under alleviation condition. SOLUTION: There is provided a method of manufacturing alcohol by hydrogenation of a carboxylic acid compound in a presence of a ruthenium complex represented by RumXnYpZq and a specific alkali metal salt. COPYRIGHT: (C)2015,JPOandINPIT
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Paragraph 0175; 0176; 0178; 0179
(2017/01/05)
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- Catalytic Upgrading of 5-Hydroxymethylfurfural to Drop-in Biofuels by Solid Base and Bifunctional Metal-Acid Catalysts
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Design and synthesis of effective heterogeneous catalysts for the conversion of biomass intermediates into long chain hydrocarbon precursors and their subsequent deoxygenation to hydrocarbons is a viable strategy for upgrading lignocellulose into distillate range drop-in biofuels. Herein, we report a two-step process for upgrading 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF) to C9 and C11 fuels with high yield and selectivity. The first step involves aldol condensation of HMF and acetone with a water tolerant solid base catalyst, zirconium carbonate (Zr(CO3)x), which gave 92 % C9-aldol product with high selectivity at nearly 100 % HMF conversion. The as-synthesised Zr(CO3)x was analysed by several analytical methods for elucidating its structural properties. Recyclability studies of Zr(CO3)x revealed a negligible loss of its activity after five consecutive cycles over 120 h of operation. Isolated aldol product from the first step was hydrodeoxygenated with a bifunctional Pd/Zeolite-β catalyst in ethanol, which showed quantitative conversion of the aldol product to n-nonane and 1-ethoxynonane with 40 and 56 % selectivity, respectively. 1-Ethoxynonane, a low oxygenate diesel range fuel, which we report for the first time in this paper, is believed to form through etherification of the hydroxymethyl group of the aldol product with ethanol followed by opening of the furan ring and hydrodeoxygenation of the ether intermediate. Two-stepping to Biofuels! A recyclable and water tolerant heterogeneous base catalyst produced 92 % C9-aldol product from 5-hydroxymethylfurfural and acetone in water. Subsequent hydrogenation of the isolated aldol product with a metal-acid Pd/zeolite-β catalyst produced gasoline and diesel range n-nonane and 1-ethoxynonane with an overall 96 % yield.
- Bohre, Ashish,Saha, Basudeb,Abu-Omar, Mahdi M.
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p. 4022 - 4029
(2015/12/17)
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- Using N-nitrosodichloroacetamides to conveniently convert linear primary amines into alcohols
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The reported rearrangement of N-nitrosodichloroacetamides provides a practicalmethod for converting primary amines into primary alcohols. The reaction sequence is operationally simple, requires only a single purification, and is compatible with a number of common functional groups. Mechanistic studies of the nitrosylation and rearrangement reactions illustrate the increased utility of dichloroacetamides compared to various other amides for this transformation.
- Macarthur, Nicholas S.,Wang, Linshu,Mccarthy, Blaine G.,Jakobsche, Charles E.
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supporting information
p. 2014 - 2021
(2015/08/18)
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- From alkenes to alcohols by cobalt-catalyzed hydroformylation-reduction
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The cobalt-catalyzed hydroformylation of alkenes in the presence of a range of novel cyclic phosphine ligands was investigated. The effect of various parameters such as solvents, additives, cobalt/phosphine ratio, CO/H2 (1:2), and nature of the alkenes was examined. The results revealed that both terminal and internal alkenes are hydroformylated in high yields to give mainly linear products at moderate temperature and syn gas pressure. The linearity ranges from 43 to 85%, with Lim-10 giving the highest proportion of linear product.
- Achonduh, George,Yang, Qian,Alper, Howard
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supporting information
p. 1241 - 1246
(2015/03/05)
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- Iron-based catalysts for the hydrogenation of esters to alcohols
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Hydrogenation of esters is vital to the chemical industry for the production of alcohols, especially fatty alcohols that find broad applications in consumer products. Current technologies for ester hydrogenation rely on either heterogeneous catalysts operating under extreme temperatures and pressures or homogeneous catalysts containing precious metals such as ruthenium and osmium. Here, we report the hydrogenation of esters under relatively mild conditions by employing an iron-based catalyst bearing a PNP-pincer ligand. This catalytic system is also effective for the conversion of coconut oil derived fatty acid methyl esters to detergent alcohols without adding any solvent.
- Chakraborty, Sumit,Dai, Huiguang,Bhattacharya, Papri,Fairweather, Neil T.,Gibson, Michael S.,Krause, Jeanette A.,Guan, Hairong
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supporting information
p. 7869 - 7872
(2014/06/23)
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- Pd-catalyzed reduction of aldehydes to alcohols using formic acid as the hydrogen donor
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Facile and selective reduction of aromatic aldehydes as well as aliphatic aldehydes to alcohols was achieved using formic acid as the hydrogen donor in the presence of a catalytic amount of Pd(OAc)2 and Cy3P. It was found that both hydrogen atoms in the formic acid molecule can serve as the hydride source. [Supplementary materials are available for this article. Go to the publisher's online edition of Synthetic Communications for the following free supplemental resource(s): Full experimental and spectral details.]
- Wang, Anwei,Yang, Zhiyong,Liu, Jidan,Gui, Qingwen,Chen, Xiang,Tan, Ze,Shi, Ji-Cheng
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supporting information
p. 280 - 288
(2013/12/04)
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- Highly efficient transfer hydrogenation of aldehydes and ketones using potassium formate over AlO(OH)-entrapped ruthenium catalysts
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Ruthenium encapsulated in an aluminium oxyhydroxide-support was investigated for the transfer hydrogenation of aldehydes and ketones with potassium formate as a sustainable green hydrogen donor. The entrapped ruthenium were narrowly distributed with mean diameters of 1.5-1.8 nm. XPS studies show that the ruthenium was present as Ru0 and Ru3+. The catalysts showed high activity even at low metal loadings of 0.5-2 wt.%. The maximum TOF for benzaldehyde hydrogenation was over 1 wt.% Ru. The reduction of aromatic and aliphatic aldehydes was facile and occurred with 100% yield. In comparison, ketones were less readily reduced although moderate to excellent yields could be obtained after a longer reaction time. No leaching of ruthenium was observed in contrast to a catalyst prepared by wet impregnation. Washing of the used catalyst with water and ethanol effectively removed the deposited bicarbonate co-product and the recycled catalyst maintained its activity up to five runs.
- Gao, Yanxiu,Jaenicke, Stephan,Chuah, Gaik-Khuan
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- COMPLEX CATALYSTS BASED ON AMINO-PHOSPHINE LIGANDS FOR HYDROGENATION AND DEHYDROGENATION PROCESSES
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The present application discloses novel PWNN and PWNWP metal catalysts for organic chemical syntheses including hydrogenation (reduction) of unsaturated compounds or dehydrogenation of substrates. The range of hydrogenation substrate compounds includes esters, lactones, enals, enones, enolates, oils and fats, resulting in alcohols, enols, diols, and triols as reaction products. The catalysts of current application can be used to catalyze a hydrogenation reaction under solvent free conditions. The present catalysts also allow the hydrogenation to proceed without added base, and it can be used in place of the conventional reduction methods employing hydrides of the main-group elements. Furthermore, the catalysts of the present application can catalyze a dehydrogenation reaction under homogenous and/or acceptorless conditions. As such, the catalysts provided herein can be useful in substantially reducing cost and improving the environmental profile of manufacturing processes for a variety of chemicals.
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Page/Page column 38; 39
(2014/09/29)
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- Tandem hydroformylation-acetalization with a ruthenium catalyst immobilized in ionic liquids
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For the first time, a ruthenium catalyzed hydroformylation-acetalization reaction of olefins is presented. The tandem reaction proceeds well with 1,2- or 1,3-diols, trapping the intermediary formed aldehydes as cyclic acetals. In this manner the hydrogenation of the aldehydes to the corresponding alcohols usually observed with Ru catalysts is prevented. The optimized catalytic system consisting of Ru catalyst, ionic liquids, acetic acid and ammonium salt can be recycled and reused for at least two further runs. Interestingly, styrenes as substrate give preferentially terminal acetals.
- Norinder, Jakob,Rodrigues, Claudia,B?rner, Armin
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p. 139 - 143
(2014/05/20)
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- Ruthenium catalysts for hydrogenation of aromatic and aliphatic esters: Make use of bidentate carbene ligands
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Committed carbenes: The convenient application of bidentate carbene ligands is described for the hydrogenation of carboxylic acid esters. The ligand precursors are easily synthesized through the dimerization of N-substituted imidazoles with diiodomethane. The catalyst is generated in situ and exhibits good activity and functional group tolerance for the hydrogenation of aromatic and aliphatic carboxylic acid esters. Copyright
- Westerhaus, Felix A.,Wendt, Bianca,Dumrath, Andreas,Wienhoefer, Gerrit,Junge, Kathrin,Beller, Matthias
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p. 1001 - 1005
(2013/07/27)
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- General and highly efficient iron-catalyzed hydrogenation of aldehydes, ketones, and α,β-unsaturated aldehydes
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EnvIRONmentally friendly: The title hydrogenation of aldehydes, ketones, and α,β-unsaturated aldehydes is reported. In the presence of the catalyst 1, primary, secondary, and allylic alcohols were obtained in good to excellent yields under mild reaction conditions. The catalyst is easily and inexpensively prepared, and is also stable to air, water, and column chromatography. Copyright
- Fleischer, Steffen,Zhou, Shaolin,Junge, Kathrin,Beller, Matthias
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p. 5120 - 5124
(2013/06/27)
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- Rabbit 3-hydroxyhexobarbital dehydrogenase is a NADPH-preferring reductase with broad substrate specificity for ketosteroids, prostaglandin D2, and other endogenous and xenobiotic carbonyl compounds
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3-Hydroxyhexobarbital dehydrogenase (3HBD) catalyzes NAD(P) +-linked oxidation of 3-hydroxyhexobarbital into 3-oxohexobarbital. The enzyme has been thought to act as a dehydrogenase for xenobiotic alcohols and some hydroxysteroids, but its physiological function remains unknown. We have purified rabbit 3HBD, isolated its cDNA, and examined its specificity for coenzymes and substrates, reaction directionality and tissue distribution. 3HBD is a member (AKR1C29) of the aldo-keto reductase (AKR) superfamily, and exhibited high preference for NADP(H) over NAD(H) at a physiological pH of 7.4. In the NADPH-linked reduction, 3HBD showed broad substrate specificity for a variety of quinones, ketones and aldehydes, including 3-, 17- and 20-ketosteroids and prostaglandin D2, which were converted to 3α-, 17β- and 20α-hydroxysteroids and 9α,11β- prostaglandin F2, respectively. Especially, α-diketones (such as isatin and diacetyl) and lipid peroxidation-derived aldehydes (such as 4-oxo- and 4-hydroxy-2-nonenals) were excellent substrates showing low Km values (0.1-5.9 μM). In 3HBD-overexpressed cells, 3-oxohexobarbital and 5β-androstan-3α-ol-17-one were metabolized into 3-hydroxyhexobarbital and 5β-androstane-3α,17β-diol, respectively, but the reverse reactions did not proceed. The overexpression of the enzyme in the cells decreased the cytotoxicity of 4-oxo-2-nonenal. The mRNA for 3HBD was ubiquitously expressed in rabbit tissues. The results suggest that 3HBD is an NADPH-preferring reductase, and plays roles in the metabolisms of steroids, prostaglandin D2, carbohydrates and xenobiotics, as well as a defense system, protecting against reactive carbonyl compounds.
- Endo, Satoshi,Matsunaga, Toshiyuki,Matsumoto, Atsuko,Arai, Yuki,Ohno, Satoshi,El-Kabbani, Ossama,Tajima, Kazuo,Bunai, Yasuo,Yamano, Shigeru,Hara, Akira,Kitade, Yukio
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p. 1366 - 1375
(2013/11/19)
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- Copper nanoparticle-catalyzed cross-coupling of alkyl halides with Grignard reagents
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A cross-coupling reaction between alkyl bromides and chlorides and various Grignard reagents was carried out in the presence of commercially available copper or copper oxide nanoparticles as a catalyst and an alkyne additive. The catalytic system shows high activity, a broad scope, and good functional group tolerance.
- Kim, Ju Hyun,Chung, Young Keun
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supporting information
p. 11101 - 11103
(2013/11/19)
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- Iron-catalyzed reduction of carboxylic esters to alcohols
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A novel catalytic system formed from Fe(stearate)2/NH 2CH2CH2NH2 and polymethylhydrosiloxane was directly developed for the hydrosilylation of carboxylic acid esters to alcohols. The catalytic method exhibits broad substrate scope, including 20 aliphatic, aromatic, and heterocyclic esters. The corresponding alcohols are obtained in moderate to very good yields. The first iron-catalyzed hydrosilylation of carboxylic acid esters to alcohols is described. A catalytic system formed by Fe(stearate)2/NH 2CH2CH2NH2 and polymethylhydrosiloxane (PMHS) is used for this transformation, which has a broad substrate scope, including 20 aliphatic, aromatic, and heterocyclic esters. The corresponding alcohols are obtained in moderate to very good yields. Copyright
- Junge, Kathrin,Wendt, Bianca,Zhou, Shaolin,Beller, Matthias
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p. 2061 - 2065
(2013/05/09)
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- Substrate specificity and subcellular localization of the aldehyde-Alcohol redox-Coupling reaction in carp cones
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Our previous study suggested the presence of a novel conespecific redox reaction that generates 11-cis-retinal from 11-cisretinol in the carp retina. This reaction is unique in that 1) both 11-cis-retinol and all-trans-retinal were required to produce 11-cis-retinal; 2) together with 11-cis-retinal, all-trans-retinol was produced at a 1:1 ratio; and 3) the addition of enzyme cofactors such as NADP(H) was not necessary. This reaction is probably part of the reactions in a cone-specific retinoid cycle required for cone visual pigment regeneration with the use of 11-cis-retinol supplied from Mueller cells. In this study, using purified carp cone membrane preparations, we first confirmed that the reaction is a redox-coupling reaction between retinals and retinols. We further examined the substrate specificity, reaction mechanism, and subcellular localization of this reaction. Oxidation was specific for 11-cis-retinol and 9-cis-retinol. In contrast, reduction showed low specificity: many aldehydes, including all-trans-, 9-cis-, 11-cis-, and 13-cis-retinals and even benzaldehyde, supported the reaction. On the basis of kinetic studies of this reaction (aldehyde-alcohol redox-coupling reaction), we found that formation of a ternary complex of a retinol, an aldehyde, and a postulated enzyme seemed to be necessary, which suggested the presence of both the retinol- and aldehydebinding sites in this enzyme. A subcellular fractionation study showed that the activity is present almost exclusively in the cone inner segment. These results suggest the presence of an effective production mechanism of 11-cis-retinal in the cone inner segment to regenerate visual pigment.
- Sato, Shinya,Fukagawa, Takashi,Tachibanaki, Shuji,Yamano, Yumiko,Wada, Akimori,Kawamura, Satoru
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p. 36589 - 36597
(2014/01/17)
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- Tandem isomerization/hydroformylation/hydrogenation of internal alkenes to n-alcohols using Rh/Ru dual-or ternary-catalyst systems
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A one-pot three-step reaction, isomerization/hydroformylation/hydrogenation of internal alkenes to n-alcohols, was accomplished by employing a Rh/Ru dual-catalyst system. By using a combination of Rh(acac)(CO)2/ bisphosphite and Shvo's catalyst, (Z)-2-tridecene was converted to 1-tetradecanol in 83% yield with high normal/iso selectivity (n/i = 12). The method was applicable to other internal alkenes, including functionalized alkenes, such as an alkenol and an alkenoate. Furthermore, addition of a third component, Ru3(CO)12, effectively improved the n/i ratio in the tandem isomerization/hydroformylation/hydrogenation of methyl oleate (from n/i = 1.9 to 4.4). Control experiments revealed that the isomerization was mediated by both Rh and Ru and that the coexistence of Rh and Ru was essential for hydrogenation of aldehyde under H2/CO.
- Yuki, Yamato,Takahashi, Kohei,Tanaka, Yoshiyuki,Nozaki, Kyoko
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p. 17393 - 17400
(2014/01/06)
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- Chemo- and regioselective homogeneous rhodium-catalyzed hydroamidomethylation of terminal alkenes to N-alkylamides
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A rhodium/xantphos homogeneous catalyst system has been developed for direct chemo- and regioselective mono-N-alkylation of primary amides with 1-alkenes and syngas through catalytic hydroamidomethylation with 1-pentene and acetamide as model substrates. For appropriate catalyst performance, it appears to be essential that catalytic amounts of a strong acid promoter, such as p-toluenesulfonic acid (HOTs), as well as larger amounts of a weakly acidic protic promoter, particularly hexafluoroisopropyl alcohol (HORF) are applied. Apart from the product N-1-hexylacetamide, the isomeric unsaturated intermediates, hexanol and higher mass byproducts, as well as the corresponding isomeric branched products, can be formed. Under optimized conditions, almost full alkene conversion can be achieved with more than 80 % selectivity to the product N-1-hexylamide. Interestingly, in the presence of a relatively high concentration of HORF, the same catalyst system shows a remarkably high selectivity for the formation of hexanol from 1-pentene with syngas, thus presenting a unique example of a selective rhodium-catalyzed hydroformylation-hydrogenation tandem reaction under mild conditions. Time-dependent product formation during hydroamidomethylation batch experiments provides evidence for aldehyde and unsaturated intermediates; this clearly indicates the three-step hydroformylation/condensation/hydrogenation reaction sequence that takes place in hydroamidomethylation. One likely role of the weakly acidic protic promoter, HORF, in combination with the strong acid HOTs, is to establish a dual-functionality rhodium catalyst system comprised of a neutral rhodium(I) hydroformylation catalyst species and a cationic rhodium(III) complex capable of selectively reducing the imide and/or ene-amide intermediates that are in a dynamic, acid-catalyzed condensation equilibrium with the aldehyde and amide in a syngas environment. Taking control: A rhodium/xantphos homogeneous catalyst system has been developed for direct chemo- and regioselective mono-N-alkylation of primary amides with 1-alkenes and syngas through the new catalytic hydroamidomethylation reaction (see picture). Copyright
- Raoufmoghaddam, Saeed,Drent, Eite,Bouwman, Elisabeth
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p. 1759 - 1773
(2013/10/21)
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