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Acrolein/acrylonitrile reaction mechanism

A number of examples have been reported documenting the use of palladium phosphine complexes as catalysts. The dialkyl species [PtL2R2] (L2 = dmpe, dppe, (PMe3)2 R = Me, CH2SiMe3) catalyze the reaction of [PhNH3]+ with activated alkenes (acrylonitrile, methyl acrylate, acrolein).176 Unfunctionalized alkenes prove unreactive. The reaction mechanism is believed to proceed via protonation of Pt-R by the ammonium salt (generating PhNH2 in turn) and the subsequent release of alkane to afford a vacant coordination site on the metal. Coordination of alkene then allows access into route A of the mechanism shown in Scheme 34. Protonation is also... [Pg.294]

Most industrially desirahle oxidation processes target products of partial, not total oxidation. Well-investigated examples are the oxidation of propane or propene to acrolein, hutane to maleic acid anhydride, benzene to phenol, or the ammoxidation of propene to acrylonitrile. The mechanism of many reactions of this type is adequately described in terms of the Mars and van Krevelen modeE A molecule is chemisorbed at the surface of the oxide and reacts with one or more oxygen ions, lowering the electrochemical oxidation state of the metal ions in the process. After desorption of the product, the oxide reacts with O2, re-oxidizing the metal ions to their original oxidation state. The selectivity of the process is determined by the relative chances of... [Pg.147]

More commonly, uranium has been used as a catalyst component for mixed-metal oxide catalysts for selective oxidation. Probably the most well known of these mixed oxide catalysts are those based on uranium and antimony. The uranium-antimony catalysts are exceptionally active and selective and they have been applied industrially. An interpretation of the catalyst structure and reaction mechanism has been reported by GrasselU and coworkers [42, 43] who discovered the catalyst The USb30io mixed oxide has been extensively used for the oxidation/ammoxida-tion reaction of propylene to acrolein and acrylonitrile. The selective ammoxida-tion of propylene was investigated by GrasseUi and coworkers [44], and it has been demonstrated that at 460 °G a 62.0% selectivity to acrolein with a conversion of 65.2% can be achieved. Furthermore, Delobel and coworkers [45] studied the selective oxidation of propylene over USb30io, which at 340 °C gave a selectivity to acrolein of 96.7%. [Pg.549]

A reaction mechanism and the description of the active site as a molecular ensemble of atoms is shown in Scheme 8.1, as proposed by Haber and coworkers [8-10] and established by Grasselli et al. [11,12] for the (amm)oxidation of propene to (acrylonitrile) acrolein. A selective oxidation reaction involves one (or several) H-atom abstraction(s) from the hydrocarbon molecule, one (or several)... [Pg.218]

Brown proposed a mechanism where the enolate radical resulting from the radical addition reacts with the trialkylborane to give a boron enolate and a new alkyl radical that can propagate the chain (Scheme 24) [61]. The formation of the intermediate boron enolate was confirmed by H NMR spectroscopy [66,67]. The role of water present in the system is to hydrolyze the boron enolate and to prevent its degradation by undesired free-radical processes. This hydrolysis step is essential when alkynones [68] and acrylonitrile [58] are used as radical traps since the resulting allenes or keteneimines respectively, react readily with radical species. Maillard and Walton have shown by nB NMR, ll NMR und IR spectroscopy, that tri-ethylborane does complex methyl vinyl ketone, acrolein and 3-methylbut-3-en-2-one. They proposed that the reaction of triethylborane with these traps involves complexation of the trap by the Lewis acidic borane prior to conjugate addition [69]. [Pg.95]


See other pages where Acrolein/acrylonitrile reaction mechanism is mentioned: [Pg.182]    [Pg.234]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.776]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.475]    [Pg.259]    [Pg.219]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.235]    [Pg.136]    [Pg.289]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.157]    [Pg.181]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.1470]    [Pg.1470]    [Pg.539]    [Pg.146]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.159 , Pg.160 ]




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Acrolein/acrylonitrile

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Acrylonitrile mechanism

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