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Catalysts cryptands

A method for the polymerization of polysulfones in nondipolar aprotic solvents has been developed and reported (9,10). The method reUes on phase-transfer catalysis. Polysulfone is made in chlorobenzene as solvent with (2.2.2)cryptand as catalyst (9). Less reactive crown ethers require dichlorobenzene as solvent (10). High molecular weight polyphenylsulfone can also be made by this route in dichlorobenzene however, only low molecular weight PES is achievable by this method. Cross-linked polystyrene-bound (2.2.2)cryptand is found to be effective in these polymerizations which allow simple recovery and reuse of the catalyst. [Pg.462]

Not all quaternary salts and cryptands work equally well in all situations. Some experimentation is often required to find the optimum catalyst. [Pg.456]

Phase transfer catalysis. As well as their use in homogeneous reactions of the type just described, polyethers (crowns and cryptands) may be used to catalyse reactions between reagents contained in two different phases (either liquid/liquid or solid/liquid). For these, the polyether is present in only catalytic amounts and the process is termed phase transfer catalysis . The efficiency of such a process depends upon a number of factors. Two important ones are the stability constant of the polyether complex being transported and the lipophilicity of the polyether catalyst used. [Pg.109]

It is worth mentioning at this point that according to Normant et al. (1975) simple polyamines such as tetramethylethylenediamine (TMEDA) are even more active than [2.2.2]-cryptand in the benzylation of acetates in acetonitrile under liquid-solid conditions. These authors suggested that the activity was due to salt solubilization by cation complexation and not to formation of a quaternary ammonium ion since the latter showed no activity. This statement, however, is not in line with the results of Cote and Bauer (1977), who were unable to detect any interaction between K+ and TMEDA in acetonitrile. Furthermore, Vander Zwan and Hartner (1978) found Aliquat 336 (tricaprylylmethylammonium chloride) to be almost as effective as TMEDA in this reaction (Table 30). It might well be, however, that in amine-catalysed benzylation reactions the quaternary salt formed in situ acts both as a reactant and as a phase-transfer catalyst, since Dou et al. (1977) have shown that the benzyltriethylammonium ion is a powerful benzylation agent. [Pg.327]

With a view to producing catalysts that can easily be removed from reaction products, typical phase-transfer catalysts such as onium salts, crown ethers, and cryptands have been immobilized on polymer supports. The use of such catalysts in liquid-liquid and liquid-solid two-phase systems has been described as triphase catalysis (Regen, 1975, 1977). Cinquini et al. (1976) have compared the activities of catalysts consisting of ligands bound to chloromethylated polystyrene cross-linked with 2 or 4% divinylbenzene and having different densities of catalytic sites ([126], [127], [ 132]—[ 135]) in the... [Pg.333]

Figure 5.16 Examples of phase transfer catalysts attached to polystyrene, containing (a) a tetraalkylammonium group, (b) a crown ether group and (c) a cryptand group... Figure 5.16 Examples of phase transfer catalysts attached to polystyrene, containing (a) a tetraalkylammonium group, (b) a crown ether group and (c) a cryptand group...
It was a result of demand from industry in the mid-1960s for an alternative to be found for the expensive traditional synthetic procedures that led to the evolution of phase-transfer catalysis in which hydrophilic anions could be transferred into an organic medium. Several phase-transfer catalysts are available quaternary ammonium, phosphonium and arsonium salts, crown ethers, cryptands and polyethylene glycols. Of these, the quaternary ammonium salts are the most versatile and, compared with the crown ethers, which have many applications, they have the advantage of being relatively cheap, stable and non-toxic [1, 2]. Additionally, comparisons of the efficiencies of the various catalysts have shown that the ammonium salts are superior to the crown ethers and polyethylene glycols and comparable with the cryptands [e.g. 3, 4], which have fewer proven applications and require higher... [Pg.1]

Quaternary onium salts were the first phase-transfer catalysts used subsequently, a number of compounds (linear polyethers, polypodands, crown-ethers, cryptands, cage-compounds, etc.) were found effective for the anion activation in two-phase systems. These structurally different systems must satisfy at least two fundamental conditions in order to behave as phase-transfer catalysts i) solubility in the organic phase ii) steric hindrance around the cationic center leading to a good cation-anion separation within the ion-pair. [Pg.55]

Both quaternary onium salts and cation complexes of lipophilic multidentate ligands (crown-ethers and cryptands) have been used as catalysts in two-phase systems in the presence of base (OH, F, etc.). However, under these conditions, the lack of chemical stability of quaternary salts and the very low complexation constants of multidentate ligands (especially crown-ethers) make all these systems barely effective in the activation of such anions. [Pg.60]

Catalysts with higher cryptand unit contents (up to 20% ring substitution) could be obtained by the condensation of carboxylated polystyrenes with aminoalkyl substituted cryptands, catalysts 15, (28). ... [Pg.64]

Immobilization of phase-transfer catalysts on polymeric matrices avoids the problem of separating and recycling the catalysts. In this case the chemical stability of the immobilized catalyst becomes very important quaternary salts often decompose under drastic reaction conditions whereas polydentate ligands are always stable. However, the difficult synthesis of cryptands, despite their high catalytic efficiency, can hardly justify their use. Synthesis of crown-ethers is much easier, but catalytic efficiences are often too low. [Pg.65]

The preparation of novel phase transfer catalysts and their application in solving synthetic problems are well documented(l). Compounds such as quaternary ammonium and phosphonium salts, phosphoramides, crown ethers, cryptands, and open-chain polyethers promote a variety of anionic reactions. These include alkylations(2), carbene reactions (3), ylide reactions(4), epoxidations(S), polymerizations(6), reductions(7), oxidations(8), eliminations(9), and displacement reactions(10) to name only a few. The unique activity of a particular catalyst rests in its ability to transport the ion across a phase boundary. This boundary is normally one which separates two immiscible liquids in a biphasic liquid-liquid reaction system. [Pg.143]

As with polymer-supported onium ions the degree of cross-linking of the polymer support is likely to affect mainly intraparticle diffusion in reactions with polymer-supported crown ethers or cryptands. The activity of catalyst 37 decreased by a factor of about 3 as % CL with divinylbenzene changed from 1 % to 4.5 % 146). [Pg.85]

Complexation constants of crown ethers and cryptands for alkali metal salts depend on the cavity sizes of the macrocycles 152,153). ln phase transfer nucleophilic reactions catalyzed by polymer-supported crown ethers and cryptands, rates may vary with the alkali cation. When a catalyst 41 with an 18-membered ring was used for Br-I exchange reactions, rates decreased with a change in salt from KI to Nal, whereas catalyst 40 bearing a 15-membered ring gave the opposite effect (Table 10)l49). A similar rate difference was observed for cyanide displacement reactions with polymer-supported cryptands in which the size of the cavity was varied 141). Polymer-supported phosphonium salt 4, as expected, gave no cation dependence of rates (Table 10). [Pg.87]

Crown ether, cryptand, and poly(ethylene glycol) catalysts are more stable in base than the quaternary ammonium and phosphonium ions. Only the polyethylene glycols) are likely to meet industrial requirements for low cost, although a number of more efficient, lower cost crown ether syntheses have appeared recently, such as those of sila-crowns 64 bound to silica1B9). [Pg.99]

Solid-liquid phase-transfer catalyst.1 The reagent represents a new class of catalysts, acyclic cryptands or tridents. It is singled out of a group as the best compromise of efficiency/price/toxicity. It solubilizes salts of alkali metals as well as of transition metals such as RuC13 and PdCl2, probably because of the flexibility of the molecule. In addition the trident is sensitive to the nature of the anion, but anionic activation is less than that obtained with cryptands. [Pg.337]

Shape selective reactions are typically carried out over zeolites, molecular sieves and other porous materials. There are three major classifications of shape selectivity including (1) reactant shape selectivity where reactants of sizes less than the pore size of the support are allowed to enter the pores to react over active sites, (2) product shape selectivity where products of sizes smaller than the pore dimensions can leave the catalyst and (3) transition state shape selectivity where sizes of pores can influence the types of transition states that may form. Other materials like porphyrins, vesicles, micelles, cryptands and cage complexes have been shown to control product selectivities by shape selective processes. [Pg.16]


See other pages where Catalysts cryptands is mentioned: [Pg.758]    [Pg.758]    [Pg.758]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.758]    [Pg.758]    [Pg.758]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.240]    [Pg.117]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.33]    [Pg.565]    [Pg.661]    [Pg.341]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.63]    [Pg.162]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.52]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.88]    [Pg.363]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.1]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.11 ]




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