603-48-5Relevant articles and documents
Macnair
, p. 1945 (1968)
Spectrofluorimetric Hydrodynamic Voltammetry: The Investigation of Electrode Reaction Mechanisms
Compton, Richard G.,Wllington, R. Geoffrey
, p. 270 - 273 (1994)
Spectrofluorimetric hydrodynamic voltammetry (SFV) is used to study the electroreduction of crystal violet in acetonitrile solution.The SFV technique is shown to have high sensitivity and to complement conventional electrochemical experiments through its identification of leucocrystal violet as an electrolysis product generated in low concentration in addition to the radical species formed as a one-electron adduct of the parent compound and previously thought to be produced exclusively.Mechanistic SFV studies show that the leucocrystal violet is formed via an EC process for which kinetic parameters are reported.
Liston,Dehn
, p. 1073 (1934)
Synthesis of symmetric triarylmethane derivatives catalyzed by AIL ionic liquid
Kang, Li Q.,Gao, Han,Cai, Yue Q.
, p. 57 - 62 (2017/12/06)
Abstract: An efficient, eco-friendly ionic liquid was described for the synthesis of symmetric triarylmethane derivatives via Baeyer condensation of N,N-dimethylaniline with different active aromatic aldehyde compounds using amide ionic liquid as a catalyst. The syntheses were achieved for the first time using amide ionic liquid as a catalyst eliminating the need for a volatile organic solvent. The advantages of this ionic liquid are low cost and operational simplicity.
Redox inactive metal ion triggered N-dealkylation by an iron catalyst with dioxygen activation: A lesson from lipoxygenases
Zhang, Jisheng,Wang, Yujuan,Luo, Nengchao,Chen, Zhuqi,Wu, Kangbing,Yin, Guochuan
, p. 9847 - 9859 (2015/06/08)
Utilization of dioxygen as the terminal oxidant at ambient temperature is always a challenge in redox chemistry, because it is hard to oxidize a stable redox metal ion like iron(iii) to its high oxidation state to initialize the catalytic cycle. Inspired by the dioxygenation and co-oxidase activity of lipoxygenases, herein, we introduce an alternative protocol to activate the sluggish iron(iii) species with non-redox metal ions, which can promote its oxidizing power to facilitate substrate oxidation with dioxygen, thus initializing the catalytic cycle. In oxidations of N,N-dimethylaniline and its analogues, adding Zn(OTf)2 to the [Fe(TPA)Cl2]Cl catalyst can trigger the amine oxidation with dioxygen, whereas [Fe(TPA)Cl2]Cl alone is very sluggish. In stoichiometric oxidations, it has also been confirmed that the presence of Zn(OTf)2 can apparently improve the electron transfer capability of the [Fe(TPA)Cl2]Cl complex. Experiments using different types of substrates as trapping reagents disclosed that the iron(iv) species does not occur in the catalytic cycle, suggesting that oxidation of amines is initialized by electron transfer rather than hydrogen abstraction. Combined experiments from UV-Vis, high resolution mass spectrometry, electrochemistry, EPR and oxidation kinetics support that the improved electron transfer ability of iron(iii) species originates from its interaction with added Lewis acids like Zn2+ through a plausible chloride or OTf- bridge, which has promoted the redox potential of iron(iii) species. The amine oxidation mechanism was also discussed based on the available data, which resembles the co-oxidase activity of lipoxygenases in oxidative dealkylation of xenobiotic metabolisms where an external electron donor is not essential for dioxygen activation.
Towards a comprehensive hydride donor ability scale
Horn, Markus,Schappele, Ludwig H.,Lang-Wittkowski, Gabriele,Mayr, Herbert,Ofial, Armin R.
supporting information, p. 249 - 263 (2013/02/25)
Rates of hydride transfer from several hydride donors to benzhydrylium ions have been measured at 20 °C and used for the determination of empirical nucleophilicity parameters N and sN according to the linear free energy relationship log k20 °C=sN(N+E). Comparison of the rate constants of hydride abstraction by tritylium ions with those calculated from the reactivity parameters sN, N, and E showed fair agreement. Therefore, it was possible to convert the large number of literature data on hydride abstraction by tritylium ions into N and sN parameters for the corresponding hydride donors, and construct a reactivity scale for hydride donors covering more than 20 orders of magnitude.