104-57-4Relevant articles and documents
Autorecycling System for Reduction of Carbonyl Compounds to Alcohols by 1,5-Dihydro-5-deazaflavins
Yoneda, Fumio,Kuroda, Kazunori,Kamishimoto, Mutsuko
, p. 1160 - 1162 (1981)
An effective recycling system for the reduction of carbonyl compounds to alcohols was constructed for the first time using 5-deazaflavins and formic acid, in such a way that each mol of the compound catalyses the reduction, by formic acid, of up to 25 mol of benzaldehyde.
DMF as a formate anion equivalent: Formolysis of tosylates in aqueous DMF
Suri,Rodgers,Radhakrishnan,Nair
, p. 1031 - 1040 (1996)
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Conversion of alkyl halides into alcohols via formyloxylation reaction with DMF catalyzed by silver salts
Abad, Antonio,Agullo, Consuelo,Cunat, Ana C.,Navarro, Ismael
, p. 3355 - 3361 (2005)
The transformation of alkyl halides into alcohols via a two-step process based on the reaction with DMF catalyzed by Ag(I) salts followed by acid or basic hydrolysis of the intermediate formate ester has been evaluated. The results show that a large variety of primary and some secondary alkyl halides can be transformed efficiently into the corresponding alcohols, making this alkyl halide to alcohol interconversion a valuable alternative to the existing procedures, particularly in molecules with labile functional groups that are generally involved in multistep synthesis. Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart.
Silica Impregnated with Tetramethylammonium Salts as Solid-Solid-Liquid Triphase Catalysts
Arrad, Onn,Sasson, Yoel
, p. 2952 - 2954 (1990)
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Substituted 9-Anthraldehydes from Dibenzocycloheptanol Epoxides via Acid-Catalyzed Epoxide Opening/Semipinacol Rearrangement
Phumjan, Tanawat,Songthammawat, Poramate,Jongcharoenkamol, Jira,Batsomboon, Paratchata,Ruchirawat, Somsak,Ploypradith, Poonsakdi
, p. 13322 - 13349 (2021/09/13)
Starting from benzaldehyde derivatives, the corresponding dibenzocycloheptenol could be prepared in five steps. Under both substrate (secondary vs tertiary alcohol and the substituents on the aromatic ring(s)) and condition control, the subsequent epoxidation and acid-catalyzed epoxide opening/semipinacol rearrangement/aromatization afforded the corresponding 9-anthraldehydes in good yields, up to 88% over two steps. The presence of the electron-withdrawing group(s) on the aromatic ring(s) suppressed the rate of the epoxidation while the subsequent semipinacol rearrangement step required heating; the presence of the electron-donating group(s), on the other hand, frequently led to the decomposition during the epoxidation. From the mechanistic studies, the semipinacol rearrangement of the epoxide could precede the ionization at the bisbenzylic position, yielding the aldehyde intermediate. The ensuing dehydrative aromatization led to the formation of 9-anthraldehyde. Conversely, nucleophilic addition to the aldehyde and dehydrative aromatization with concomitant loss of formic acid led to anthracene.
Ionic liquid-stabilized vanadium oxo-clusters catalyzing alkane oxidation by regulating oligovanadates
Ding, Bingjie,Gong, Xueqing,Hou, Zhenshan,Li, Difan,Yao, Yefeng,Zhang, Ran,Zheng, Anna,Zhou, Qingqing
, p. 7601 - 7612 (2020/11/27)
Alkane oxidation under mild conditions occupies an important position in the chemical industry. Herein, we have designed a novel class of ionic liquid ([TBA][Pic])-stabilized vanadium oxo-clusters (TBA = tetrabutylammonium; Pic = picolinate ions), in which the molar ratio of the IL to V atoms can be tuned facilely to obtain V-OC?IL-0.5, V-OC?IL-1 and V-OC?IL-2, respectively. The as-synthesized vanadium oxo-clusters have been characterized by elemental analysis, FT-IR, UV-vis, XRD, TGA, EPR, NMR and MS. These vanadium oxo-clusters were catalytically active for catalyzing the oxidation of cyclohexane with H2O2 as an oxidant. In particular, the oxo-cluster V-OC?IL-1 (where IL/V is 1.0) can provide an approximately 30% total yield of KA oil (cyclohexanol and cyclohexanone) without adding any co-catalyst at 50 °C within 1.0 h. Moreover, the present vanadium oxo-cluster was recyclable owing to the modification of the IL and it can also be extended to the oxidation of the sp2 hybrid aromatic ring. The further characterization results demonstrated that the oligovanadate anions were strongly dependent on the molar ratio of the IL to V atoms. The vanadium oxo-clusters with the appropriate molar ratio of IL/V could exist in the form of a trimer and a dimer due to the presence of the TBA cation and the coordination of picolinate. Notably, the oligovanadate anions are highly active species for the C-H oxidation but the mononuclear vanadate afforded a very poor activity according to the activity assessment and the identification of vanadium species from the 51V NMR spectra and MS spectra. The annihilation reaction of free radicals and EPR characterization suggested that the vanadium oxo-clusters operated via a mechanism of the HO radical in the oxidation reaction.