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Immobilization supported hydrogen bonded catalysts

An alternative to the supported liquid phase (SLP) method was recently proposed using the same type of solid the supported hydrogen bonded (SHB) catalysts. First demonstrated with the zwitteronic Rh1 catalysts [(sulphos)Rh(cod)] (1) and [(sulphos)Rh(CO)2] (2) (sulphos = 03S(Cr,I I4)CI I2C(CH2PPh2) ). the immobilization procedure is based on the capability of the sulfonate tail of sulphos to link the silanol groups of the support via hydrogen bonds (Figure 12). [Pg.456]

Renewed interest in this method came recently from its adaptation to the immobilization of water/ organic solvent biphasic catalysts, resulting in the so-called supported aqueous phase catalysts (SAPCs).117 The molecular catalyst is immobilized via water, which is hydrogen bonded to the surface silanol groups reactants and products are in the organic phase (Figure 11)... [Pg.455]

Catalyst system comprising a polymer support in which catalytically active species are immobilized through chemical bonds or weaker interactions such as hydrogen bonds or donor-acceptor interactions. [Pg.243]

The use of supported (i.e., heterogenized) homogeneous catalysts offers another possibility for easy catalyst separation. New examples include polymer-anchored Schiff-base complexes of Pd(TT),446 PdCl2(PhCN)2 supported on heterocyclic polyamides,447 various Pd complexes supported on crosslinked polymers 448 sol-gel-encapsulated Rh-quatemary ammonium ion-pair catalysts,449 and zwitterionic Rh(T) catalysts immobilized on silica with hydrogen bonding.450... [Pg.673]

Adsorption on silica gel surfaces or silica gels coated with water or thin layers of ionic liquids has been used to immobilize transition metal complexes % ionic interactions and hydrogen bonding. Reversed-phase silica gels were used to retain catalysts by hydrophobic interactions. Support of catalysts on fluorous reversed-phase silica gel by the solvophobic nature of perfluoroalkyl chains is a new and promising approach with potential in catalysis and combinatorial chemistry. [Pg.44]

In this and the following sections we describe the methods which do not need a hydrophilic solvent to retain the catalyst on the surface of the solid support. Utilization of hydrogen bonding for the non-covalent immobilization of Ru and Rh complexes on silica gel was investigated in detail [45-47]. The loading of the support was done without further covalent modification of the silica gel, and there was no need for a solvent film covering the support particles. [Pg.60]


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