619-19-2Relevant articles and documents
Palladium-catalyzed ortho-C-H hydroxylation of benzoic acids
Luo, Feihua,He, Shuhua,Gou, Quan,Chen, Jinyang,Zhang, mingzhong
, (2021/10/06)
A simple Pd(OAc)2 catalyzed ortho-hydroxylation of benzoic acids using TBHP as the sole oxidant has been explored. This protocol features relatively broad substrate scope and operational simplicity. The compatibility of ortho-substituted substrates is an effective complement to the previous ortho-hydroxylation reaction.
Fe3O4@SiO2@Im[Cl]Mn(III)-complex as a highly efficient magnetically recoverable nanocatalyst for selective oxidation of alcohol to imine and oxime
Kazemnejadi, Milad,Alavi, Seyyedeh Ameneh,Rezazadeh, Zinat,Nasseri, Mohammad Ali,Allahresani, Ali,Esmaeilpour, Mohsen
, p. 230 - 249 (2019/03/28)
An efficient and environmentally friendly oxidation process for the one-pot preparation of oxime, imine and carbonyl compounds through alcohol oxidation in the presence of H2O2 and/or O2 have been developed by a melamine-Mn(III) Schiff base complex supported on Fe3O4@SiO2–Cl nanoparticles, named as Fe3O4@SiO2@Im[Cl]Mn(III)-complex nanocomposite, at room temperature. Direct oxidation of alcohol to carboxylic acid was performed using the catalyst in the presence of molecular O2 at room temperature in a different approach. The oxidation products were obtained with excellent yields and high TOFs. The properties of the catalyst were characterized by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), elemental analysis (C, H, N), X-ray diffraction (XRD), field emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM), dynamic light scattering (DLS), energy dispersive X-ray analysis (EDX), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), inductive coupled plasma (ICP), cyclic voltammetry (CV), nuclear magnetic resonance (1H & 13C NMR), vibration sample magnetometer (VSM), Brunauer– Emmett–Teller (BET) and differential pulse voltammetry (DPV) analyses. The mechanism of the oxidation processes was investigated for the both H2O2 and O2 oxidants. The role of the imidazolium moiety in the catalyst as a secondary functionality was investigated. Chemoselectivity behavior of the catalyst was studied by some combinations. The catalyst could be recycled from the reaction mixture by a simple external magnet and reused for several times without any considerable reactivity loss.
Potassium Periodate/NaNO2/KHSO4-Mediated Nitration of Aromatic Compounds and Kinetic Study of Nitration of Phenols in Aqueous Acetonitrile
Sriram, Y. Hemanth,Fatima, Touheeth,Rajanna,Kumar, M. Satish,Raju, R. Madhusudan
supporting information, p. 622 - 632 (2017/06/30)
Synthesis and kinetics of potassium periodate(KIO4)/NaNO2/KHSO4)-initiated nitration of aromatic compounds have been studied in aqueous acetonitrile medium. Synthesis of nitroaromatic compounds is achieved under conventional and solvent-free microwave conditions. Reaction times in microwave-assisted reaction are comparatively less than in conventional reaction. The reaction kinetics for the nitration of phenols in aqueous bisulfate and acetonitrile medium indicated first-order dependence on [phenol], [NaNO2], and [KIO4]. An increase in [KHSO4] accelerated the rate of nitration under otherwise similar conditions. The rate of nitration increased in the solvent of high dielectric media (solvents with high dielectric constant (D)). Observed results were in accordance with Amis and Kirkwood plots [log k′ vs. (1/D) and [(D ? 1)/(2D + 1)]. These observations probably indicate the participation of anionic species and molecular or (dipolar) species in the rate-determining step. In addition, the plots of (log k′) versus volume% of organic solvent were also linear, which probably indicate the importance of both electrostatic and nonelectrostatic forces, solvent–solute interactions during nitration of phenols. Reaction rates accelerated with the introduction of electron-donating groups and retarded with electron-withdrawing groups, but results could not be quantitatively correlated with Hammett's equation and depicted deviations from linearity. These deviations could probably be attributed to cumulative effects arising inductive, resonance, and steric effects. Leffler's plot (ΔH# vs. ΔS#) was found linear indicating the compensation (cumulative) effect of both enthalpy and entropy parameters in controlling the mechanism of nitration.