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1.
Chemistry ; 30(49): e202401918, 2024 Sep 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38865343

ABSTRACT

A series of a novel CAAC ligands featuring a spiro-fluorene group have been synthesized and complexed with ruthenium alkylidenes, yielding the corresponding Hoveyda-type derivatives as a new family of olefin metathesis catalysts. The novel complexes have been characterized by XRD, HRMS and NMR measurements. The synthetised complexes were tested in catalysis and showed good activity in olefin metathesis, as demonstrated on diethyl diallylmalonate and allyl acetate substrates. The unique backbone in the ligand with the large, yet inflexible condensed system renders interesting properties to the catalyst, exemplified by the good catalytic performance and improved Z-selectivity. In addition, the complex can also serve as a hydrogenation catalyst in a consecutive (one-pot) reaction. The latter reaction can convert allyl acetate to butane-1,4-diol, a valuable chemical intermediate for biodegradable polybutylene succinate (PBS).

2.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 11(19): e2400118, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38482751

ABSTRACT

Isomerization Metathesis (ISOMET) reaction is an emerging tool for "open loop" chemical recycling of polyethylene to propylene. Novel, latent N-Alkyl substituted Cyclic(Alkyl)(Amino)Carbene (CAAC)-ruthenium catalysts (5a-Ru, 3b-Ru - 6c-Ru) are developed rendering "inverted" chemical structure while showing enhanced ISOMET activity in combination with (RuHCl)(CO)(PPh3)3 (RuH) double bond isomerization co-catalyst. Systematic investigations reveal that the steric hindrance of the substituents on nitrogen and carbon atom adjacent to carbene moiety in the CAAC ligand have significantly improved the catalytic activity and robustness. In contrast to the NHC-Ru and CAAC-Ru catalyst systems known so far, these systems show higher isomerization metathesis (ISOMET) activity (TON: 7400) on the model compound 1-octadecene at as low as 3.0 bar optimized pressure, using technical grade (3.0) ethylene. The propylene content formed in the gas phase can reach up to 20% by volume.

3.
ChemSusChem ; 16(15): e202300553, 2023 Aug 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37083068

ABSTRACT

The vastness of the scale of the plastic waste problem will require a variety of strategies and technologies to move toward sustainable and circular materials. One of these strategies to address the challenge of persistent fossil-based plastics is new catalytic processes that are being developed to convert recalcitrant waste such as polyethylene to produce propylene, which can be an important precursor of high-performance polymers that can be designed to biodegrade or to degrade on demand. Remarkably, this process also enables the production of biodegradable polymers using renewable raw materials. In this Perspective, current catalyst systems and strategies that enable the catalytic degradation of polyethylene to propylene are presented. In addition, concepts for using "green" propylene as a raw material to produce compostable polymers is also discussed.

4.
Nat Chem ; 14(11): 1242-1248, 2022 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36064971

ABSTRACT

Cyclic polymers are topologically interesting and envisioned as a lubricant material. However, scalable synthesis of pure cyclic polymers remains elusive. The most straightforward way is to recover a used catalyst after the synthesis of cyclic polymers and reuse it. Unfortunately, this is demanding because of the catalyst's vulnerability and inseparability from polymers, which reduce the practicality of the process. Here we develop a continuous circular process, where polymerization, polymer separation and catalyst recovery happen in situ, to dispense a pure cyclic polymer after bulk ring-expansion metathesis polymerization of cyclopentene. It is enabled by introducing silica-supported ruthenium catalysts and newly designed glassware. Different depolymerization kinetics of the cyclic polymer from its linear analogue are also discussed. This process minimizes manual labour, maximizes the security of vulnerable catalysts and guarantees the purity of cyclic polymers, thereby showcasing a prototype of a scalable access to cyclic polymers with increased turnovers (≥415,000) of precious catalysts.

6.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(28): e202204413, 2022 Jul 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35420225

ABSTRACT

One of the most exciting scientific challenges today is the catalytic degradation of non-biodegradable polymers into value-added chemical feedstocks. The mild pyrolysis of polyolefins, including high-density polyethylene (HDPE), results in pyrolysis oils containing long-chain olefins as major products. In this paper, novel bicyclic (alkyl)(amino)carbene ruthenium (BICAAC-Ru) temperature-activated latent olefin metathesis catalysts, which can be used for catalytic decomposition of long-chain olefins to propylene are reported. These thermally stable catalysts show significantly higher selectivity to propylene at a reaction temperature of 75 °C compared to second generation Hoveyda-Grubbs or CAAC-Ru catalysts under ethenolysis conditions. The conversion of long-chain olefins (e.g., 1-octadecene or methyl oleate) to propylene via isomerization-metathesis is performed by using a (RuHCl)(CO)(PPh3 )3 isomerization co-catalyst. The reactions can be carried out at a BICAAC-Ru catalyst loading as low as 1 ppm at elevated reaction temperature (75 °C). The observed turnover number and turnover frequency are as high as 55 000 and 10 000 molpropylene molcatalyst -1 h-1 , respectively.

7.
Int J Pharm ; 562: 333-341, 2019 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30867128

ABSTRACT

Vinyl alcohol (VA) copolymers having fine tunable polarities are emerging materials in drug delivery applications. VA copolymers rendering well-defined molecular architecture (C/OH ratio = 2, 4, 5 and 8) were used as carriers for model drug compound, fluorescein, which exhibited significantly different release characteristics depending on the polarity of the polymers. Based on the preliminary drug release tests the well-defined VA copolymer having C/OH = 5 ratio, poly(vinyl alcohol alt-propenylene) copolymer (PVA-5) was selected for nanocomposite synthesis. Sorafenib anticancer drug was embedded into PVA-5 (C/OH = 5 ratio) nanoparticles by nanoprecipitation resulting in nanoparticles exhibiting unusual cubic shape. The sorafenib-loaded nanocomposites showed continuous release during a day and concentration-dependant cytotoxicity on HT-29 cancer cells. This might be interpreted by the sustained release of the drug.


Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Agents , Drug Carriers , Nanocomposites , Sorafenib , Antineoplastic Agents/administration & dosage , Antineoplastic Agents/chemistry , Drug Carriers/administration & dosage , Drug Carriers/chemistry , Drug Liberation , HT29 Cells , Humans , Nanocomposites/administration & dosage , Nanocomposites/chemistry , Polymers/administration & dosage , Polymers/chemistry , Sorafenib/administration & dosage , Sorafenib/chemistry
8.
Chemistry ; 21(45): 15894-906, 2015 Nov 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26338471

ABSTRACT

With metal-based catalysts, it is quite common that a ligand (L) must first dissociate from a catalyst precursor (L'n M-L) to activate the catalyst. The resulting coordinatively unsaturated active species (L'n M) can either back react with the ligand in a k-1 step, or combine with the substrate in a k2 step. When dissociation is not rate determining and k-1 [L] is greater than or comparable to k2 [substrate], this slows the rate of reaction. By introducing a phase label onto the ligand L and providing a suitable orthogonal liquid or solid phase, dramatic rate accelerations can be achieved. This phenomenon is termed "phase-transfer activation". In this Concept, some historical antecedents are reviewed, followed by successful applications involving fluorous/organic and aqueous/organic liquid/liquid biphasic catalysis, and liquid/solid biphasic catalysis. Variants that include a chemical trap for the phase-labeled ligands are also described.

9.
Org Biomol Chem ; 11(36): 5976-88, 2013 Sep 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23925443

ABSTRACT

The development of new types of ß-lactam antibiotics is a relevant field of contemporary pharmaceutical research. Although many types of antibiotics are available on the market and widely used, ß-lactam antibiotics are considered to be one of the best choice as they are highly effective while having reasonable safety profiles. The wide application however has led to the appearance of resistant bacteria suppressing their efficacy. In the last decade fewer and fewer new antibiotics have been launched into the market, however more and more multiresistant germs have appeared posing significant threats especially to patients who are suffering from chronic diseases and have weakened immune systems. The development of new, highly efficient antibiotics is now direly needed. One of the options to accelerate ß-lactam antibiotic research is the development of alternative robust, convenient, versatile and cheap synthetic procedures in which the ß-lactam molecules can be easily synthesized with the desired diastereoselectivity. The most general way to introduce diastereoselectivity in the chemical reactions is the application of chiral catalyst systems. While there are several systems for the synthesis of ß-lactams the transition metal assisted Staudinger reaction--[2 + 2] cycloaddition between a ketene and an imine--remained the most simple and most versatile methodology. The motivation behind this brief review is to draw the chemical community's attention to the relevance and applicability of transition metal promoted Staudinger reactions in ß-lactam based antibiotic development. This article summarizes the most relevant pioneer works completed on this field in order to open new ideas for the forthcoming organometallic systems based bioactive material development.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/chemical synthesis , Transition Elements/chemistry , beta-Lactams/chemical synthesis , Anti-Bacterial Agents/chemistry , Catalysis , Cyclization , Molecular Structure , beta-Lactams/chemistry
10.
Inorg Chem ; 51(18): 9943-9, 2012 Sep 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22954330

ABSTRACT

A fluorous phosphine analogue of Grubbs' second generation olefin metathesis catalyst, (H(2)IMes)((R(f8)(CH(2))(2))(3)P)(Cl)(2)Ru(=CHPh) (1; H(2)IMes/R(f8) = 1,3-dimesityl-4,5-dihydroimidazol-2-ylidene/(CF(2))(7)CF(3)) is crystallized and the X-ray structure analyzed in detail. The bond lengths and angles about ruthenium are compared to those of two solvates and five derivatives of Grubbs' second generation catalyst. All exhibit distorted square pyramidal geometries in which the alkylidene ligands occupy apical positions, and geometric trends are interpreted with the help of density functional calculations. The perfluoroalkyl groups (1) exhibit helical conformations, as manifested by various torsional relationships, (2) segregate in the lattice, and (3) align in pairs of opposite helical chiralities.


Subject(s)
Hydrocarbons, Fluorinated/chemistry , Organometallic Compounds/chemical synthesis , Phosphines/chemistry , Quantum Theory , Alkenes/chemistry , Catalysis , Crystallography, X-Ray , Models, Molecular , Molecular Structure , Organometallic Compounds/chemistry , Ruthenium/chemistry
11.
Dalton Trans ; (13): 2275-83, 2005 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15962048

ABSTRACT

Reactions of the diphosphine 1,3-C6H4(CH2PH2)2 and fluorous alkenes H2C=CHR(fn)(R(fn)=(CF2)(n-1)CF3; n = 6, 8) at 75 degrees C in the presence of AIBN give the title ligands 1,3-C6H4(CH2P(CH2CH2R(fn))2)2(3-R(fn)) and byproducts 1,3-C6H4(CH3)(CH2P(CH2CH2R(fn))2)(4-R(fn)) in 1 : 3 to 1 : 5 ratios. Workups give -R(fn) in 4--17% yields. Similar results are obtained photochemically. Reaction of 1,3-C6H4(CH2Br)2 and HP(CH2CH2R(f8))2 (5) at 80 degrees C (neat, 1 : 2 mol ratio) gives instead of simple substitution the metacyclophane [1,3-C6H4(CH2P(CH2CH2R(f8))2 CH2-1,3-C(6)H(4)CH(2)P[lower bond 1 end](CH2CH2R(f8))2C[upper bond 1 end]H2](2+)2Br-, which upon treatment with LiAlH(4) yields 3-R(f8)(20%), 4-R(f8), and other products. Efforts to better access 3-R(f8), either by altering stoichiometry or using various combinations of the phosphine borane (H3B)PH(CH2CH2R(f8))2 and base, are unsuccessful. Reactions of 3-R(fn) with Pd(O2CCF3)2 and [IrCl(COE)2]2(COE=cyclooctene) give the palladium and iridium pincer complexes (2,6,1-C6H3(CH2 P(CH2CH2R(fn))(2)(2)Pd(O2CCF3)(10-R(fn); 80-90%) and (2,6,1-C6H3(CH2P(CH2CH2R(f8))2)2)Ir(Cl)(H)(11-R(f8); 29%), which exhibit CF3C6F(11)/toluene partition coefficients of >96 : <4. The crystal structure of 10-R(f8) shows CH2CH2R(f8) groups with all-anti conformations that extend in parallel above and below the palladium square plane to create fluorous lattice domains. NMR monitoring shows a precursor to 11-R(f8) that is believed to be a COE adduct.

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