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1.
Molecules ; 28(14)2023 Jul 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37513317

RESUMO

A subcritical water degradation and extraction method was developed to remediate environmental soils contaminated by highly recalcitrant organochlorine pollutants. Hydrogen peroxide was used to effectively decompose organochlorine pollutants under subcritical water conditions. As a method optimization study, the static wet oxidation of chlorophenols was first performed in subcritical water with and without added hydrogen peroxide. Complete oxidation was achieved using an added oxidant, and thus, the oxidation and extraction of chlorophenols from a sand matrix was then attempted. Complete oxidation and extraction with added oxidant were achieved within 30 min at 100 °C. We then investigated the subcritical water degradation and extraction of dieldrin, mirex, and p,p'-DDD. These organochlorine pesticides were not as easily oxidized as the chlorophenols, and the benefit of adding hydrogen peroxide was only clearly observed at 200 °C. Approximately a 20% increase in degradation was noted for each pesticide and insecticide at this temperature. Unfortunately, this difference was not observed with an increase in temperature to 250 °C, except in some cases, where the amount of degradation byproducts was reduced. Dieldrin and p,p'-DDD were essentially destroyed at 250 °C, while all the pesticides and the insecticides were completely removed from the sand at this temperature. The proposed method was then used to remediate a soil sample highly contaminated with DDT. The soil was obtained from the grounds of an old DDT mixing facility in Virginia and has been aging for several decades. Not only was 100% removal of DDT from this soil achieved using the proposed method at 250 °C, but also, the extracted DDT was completely destroyed during the process. The proposed remediation method, therefore, demonstrates a high potential as an efficient and environmentally sound technique for the detoxification of soils.

2.
Beilstein J Org Chem ; 13: 384-392, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28382176

RESUMO

Dienoic acids and pentadienyl alcohols are coupled in a decarboxylative and dehydrative manner at ambient temperature using Pd(0) catalysis to generate 1,3,6,8-tetraenes. Contrary to related decarboxylative coupling reactions, an anion-stabilizing group is not required adjacent to the carboxyl group. Of mechanistic importance, it appears that both the diene of the acid and the diene of the alcohol are required for this reaction. To further understand this reaction, substitutions at every unique position of both coupling partners was examined and two potential mechanisms are presented.

3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 127(46): 16042-3, 2005 Nov 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16287288

RESUMO

Asymmetric rhodium-catalyzed hydroacylation has been utilized in the synthesis of 3-substituted indanones with high conversions and enantioselectivity. The hydroacylation reaction of 2-vinyl benzaldehyde had been previously reported to give a low yield of indanone and an unidentified product. We have identified this compound as a dimer of the starting material. Substitution at the alpha-position of the 2-vinyl benzaldehyde substrates blocks the competitive dimerization reaction and allows the reaction to proceed with yields generally greater than 90%. Utilization of BINAP as a chiral ligand results in good chemical yields and enantioselectivity greater than 95% in most cases.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 124(6): 1014-23, 2002 Feb 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11829610

RESUMO

Rhodium carboxylate-mediated reactions of diazoketones involving cyclopropanation, C-H insertion, and aromatic C-C double bond addition/electrocyclic ring opening obey saturation (Michaelis-Menten) kinetics. Axial ligands for rhodium, including aromatic hydrocarbons and Lewis bases such as nitriles, ethers, and ketones, inhibit these reactions by a mixed kinetic inhibition mechanism, meaning that they can bind both to the free catalyst and to the catalyst-substrate complex. Substrate inhibition can also be exhibited by diazocompounds bearing these groupings in addition to the diazo group. The analysis of inhibition shows that the active catalyst uses only one of its two coordination sites at a time for catalysis. Some ketones exhibit the interesting property that they selectively bind to the catalyst-substrate complex. The similarity of the kinetic constants from different types of reactions with similar diazoketones, regardless of the linking unit or the environment of the reacting alkene, suggests that the rate-determining step is the generation of the rhodium carbenoid. A very useful rhodium carboxylate catalyst for asymmetric synthesis, Rh(2)(DOSP)(4), shows slightly slower kinetic parameters than the achiral catalysts, implying that enantioselectivity of this catalyst is based on slowing reactions from one of the enantiotopic faces of the reactant, rather than any type of ligand-accelerated catalysis. A series of rhodium catalysts derived from acids with pK(a)s spanning 4 orders of magnitude give very similar kinetic constants.


Assuntos
Enzimas/química , Compostos Organometálicos/química , Ródio/química , Ácidos Carboxílicos/química , Catálise , Cetonas/química , Cinética , Mimetismo Molecular
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