52648-48-3Relevant articles and documents
Direct reductive amination of aldehydes with nitroarenes using bio-renewable formic acid as a hydrogen source
Zhang, Qi,Li, Shu-Shuang,Zhu, Ming-Ming,Liu, Yong-Mei,He, He-Yong,Cao, Yong
, p. 2507 - 2513 (2016)
Reductive amination (RA) is one of the most important transformations in organic chemistry. A versatile and sustainable gas-free RA of aldehydes carried out directly with cheaply available nitroarenes using stoichiometric amounts of non-toxic and entirely renewable formic acid (FA) as the terminal reductant is described herein. A single phase rutile titania supported gold (Au/TiO2-R) catalyst is shown to catalyse efficiently this FA-based direct RA in neat water under mild reaction conditions. The broad scope, mild and neutral conditions, together with CO2 and water as environmental harmless byproducts, make this transformation very useful. Moreover, straightforward examples of the direct construction of bioactive heterocyclic compounds containing a benzimidazole motif were achieved through this protocol.
Tungsten-Catalyzed Direct N-Alkylation of Anilines with Alcohols
Lan, Xiao-Bing,Ye, Zongren,Yang, Chenhui,Li, Weikang,Liu, Jiahao,Huang, Ming,Liu, Yan,Ke, Zhuofeng
, p. 860 - 865 (2021/01/18)
The implementation of non-noble metals mediated chemistry is a major goal in homogeneous catalysis. Borrowing hydrogen/hydrogen autotransfer (BH/HA) reaction, as a straightforward and sustainable synthetic method, has attracted considerable attention in the development of non-noble metal catalysts. Herein, we report a tungsten-catalyzed N-alkylation reaction of anilines with primary alcohols via BH/HA. This phosphine-free W(phen)(CO)4 (phen=1,10-phenthroline) system was demonstrated as a practical and easily accessible in-situ catalysis for a broad range of amines and alcohols (up to 49 examples, including 16 previously undisclosed products). Notably, this tungsten system can tolerate numerous functional groups, especially the challenging substrates with sterically hindered substituents, or heteroatoms. Mechanistic insights based on experimental and computational studies are also provided.
Convenient and Reusable Manganese-Based Nanocatalyst for Amination of Alcohols
Subaramanian, Murugan,Ramar, Palmurukan M.,Sivakumar, Ganesan,Kadam, Ravishankar G.,Petr, Martin,Zboril, Radek,Gawande, Manoj B.,Balaraman, Ekambaram
, p. 4334 - 4341 (2021/08/25)
The development of new sustainable nanocatalytic systems for green chemical synthesis is a growing area in chemical science. Herein, a reusable heterogeneous N-doped graphene-based manganese nanocatalyst (Mn@NrGO) for selective N-alkylation of amines with alcohols is described. Mechanistic studies illustrate that the catalytic reaction follows a domino dehydrogenation-condensation-hydrogenation sequence of alcohols and amines with the formation of water as the sole by-product. The scope of the reaction is extended to the synthesis of pharmaceutically important N-alkylated amine intermediates. The heterogeneous nature of the catalyst made it easy to separate for long-term performance, and the recycling study revealed that the catalyst was robust and retained its activity after several recycling experiments.