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Iridium reduction

Stereoselective hydrogenations. The stereochemistry of the hydrogenation of a double bond catalyzed by this Ir(I) complex is markedly controlled by the presence of a carboxamide group. The effect is attributed to coordination between the CONH group and iridium. Reductions of the same substrates with Pd/C show no stereoselection.2... [Pg.88]

The PGM concentrate is attacked with aqua regia to dissolve gold, platinum, and palladium. The more insoluble metals, iridium, rhodium, mthenium, and osmium remain as a residue. Gold is recovered from the aqua regia solution either by reduction to the metallic form with ferrous salts or by solvent-extraction methods. The solution is then treated with ammonium chloride to produce a precipitate of ammonium hexachloroplatinate(IV),... [Pg.168]

Ca.ta.lysis, Iridium compounds do not have industrial appHcations as catalysts. However, these compounds have been studied to model fundamental catalytic steps (174), such as substrate binding of unsaturated molecules and dioxygen oxidative addition of hydrogen, alkyl haHdes, and the carbon—hydrogen bond reductive elimination and important metal-centered transformations such as carbonylation, -elimination, CO reduction, and... [Pg.181]

Electrochemical reduction of iridium solutions in the presence azodye (acid chrome dark blue [ACDB]) on slowly dropping mercury electrode is accompanied by occurrence of additional peaks on background acetic-ammonium buffer solutions except for waves of reduction azodye. Potentials of these peaks are displaced to cathode region of the potential compared to the respective peaks of reduction of the azodye. The nature of reduction current in iridium solutions in the presence ACDB is diffusive with considerable adsorptive limitations. The method of voltamiuetric determination of iridium with ACDB has been developed (C 1-2 x 10 mol/L). [Pg.118]

By a suitable choice of conditions (metal hydrides or metal/ammonia) ketones at the 1-, 2-, 4-, 6-, 7-, 11-, 12- and 20-positions in 5a-H steroids can be reduced to give each of the possible epimeric alcohols in reasonable yield. Hov/ever, the 3- and 17-ketones are normally reduced to give predominantly their -(equatorial) alcohols. Use of an iridium complex as catalyst leads to a high yield of 3a-alcohol, but the 17a-ol still remains elusive by direct reduction. [Pg.81]

A mixture of the ketone (4.62 g), iridium tetrachloride (1.23 g), trimethyl phosphite (15 ml), propan-2-oI (200 ml) and water (50 ml) is heated under reflux for 21 hr. Much of the solvent is then distilled off ca. 215 ml) and the organic products remaining are isolated by extraction with ether. If reduction is essentially complete, the product at this stage may be sufficiently pure for most preparative purposes. Pure components can be obtained by chromatography over alumina, a representative experiment (on the above scale) gives unchanged ketone (0.13 g), cw-alcohol (4.36 g) and tmns-2 co o (0.16 g) (eluted in this order by pentane, and then by pentane containing ether). [Pg.101]

A recently discovered reduction procedure provides a convenient route to axial alcohols in cyclohexyl derivatives (5). The detailed mechanism of the reaction remains to be elucidated, but undoubtedly the reducing agent is an iridium species containing one or more phosphate groups as ligands. In any case, it is clear that the steric demands of the reducing agent must be extraordinary since the stereochemical outcome of the reaction is so specific. The procedure below is for the preparation of a pure axial alcohol from the ketone. [Pg.22]

Reduction of unsaturated aldehydes seems more influenced by the catalyst than is that of unsaturated ketones, probably because of the less hindered nature of the aldehydic function. A variety of special catalysts, such as unsupported (96), or supported (SJ) platinum-iron-zinc, plalinum-nickel-iron (47), platinum-cobalt (90), nickel-cobalt-iron (42-44), osmium (<55), rhenium heptoxide (74), or iridium-on-carbon (49), have been developed for selective hydrogenation of the carbonyl group in unsaturated aldehydes. None of these catalysts appears to reduce an a,/3-unsaturated ketonic carbonyl selectively. [Pg.71]

The mechanism of the oxygen reduction reaction is by no means as fully understood as the h.e.r., and a major experimental difficulty is that in acid solutions (pH = 0) E02/H20 = 1 23, which means that oxygen will start to be reduced at potentials at which most metals anodically dissolve. For this reason accurate data on kinetics is available only for the platinum metals. In the case of an iridium electrode at which oxygen reduction is relatively rapid, a number of reaction sequences have been proposed, of which the most acceptable appear to be the following ... [Pg.102]

The most successful class of active ingredient for both oxidation and reduction is that of the noble metals silver, gold, ruthenium, rhodium, palladium, osmium, iridium, and platinum. Platinum and palladium readily oxidize carbon monoxide, all the hydrocarbons except methane, and the partially oxygenated organic compounds such as aldehydes and alcohols. Under reducing conditions, platinum can convert NO to N2 and to NH3. Platinum and palladium are used in small quantities as promoters for less active base metal oxide catalysts. Platinum is also a candidate for simultaneous oxidation and reduction when the oxidant/re-ductant ratio is within 1% of stoichiometry. The other four elements of the platinum family are in short supply. Ruthenium produces the least NH3 concentration in NO reduction in comparison with other catalysts, but it forms volatile toxic oxides. [Pg.79]

The nozzle of original design was fabricated from a niobium alloy coated with niobium silicide and could not operate above 1320°C. This was replaced by a thin shell of rhenium protected on the inside by a thin layer of iridium. The iridium was deposited first on a disposable mandrel, from iridium acetylacetonate (pentadionate) (see Ch. 6). The rhenium was then deposited over the iridium by hydrogen reduction of the chloride. The mandrel was then chemically removed. Iridium has a high melting point (2410°C) and provides good corrosion protection for the rhenium. The nozzle was tested at 2000°C and survived 400 cycles in a high oxidizer to fuel ratio with no measurable corrosion.O l... [Pg.445]

Iridium and rhodium nanoparticles have also been studied in the hydrogenation of various aromatic compoimds. In all cases, total conversions were not observed in BMI PF6. TOFs based on mol of cyclohexane formed were 44 h for toluene hydrogenation with Ir (0) and 24 h and 5 h for p-xylene reduction with lr(0) or Rh(0) nanoparticles, respectively. The cis-1,4-dimethylcyclohexane is the major product and the cisitrans ratio depends on the nature of the metal 5 1 for lr(0) and 2 1 for Rh(0). TEM experiments show a mean diameter of 2.3 nm and 2.1 nm for rhodium and iridium particles, respectively. The same nanoparticle size distribution is observed after catalysis (Fig. 4). [Pg.268]

The ability of enzymes to achieve the selective esterification of one enantiomer of an alcohol over the other has been exploited by coupling this process with the in situ metal-catalysed racemisation of the unreactive enantiomer. Marr and co-workers have used the rhodium and iridium NHC complexes 44 and 45 to racemise the unreacted enantiomer of substrate 7 [17]. In combination with a lipase enzyme (Novozyme 435), excellent enantioselectivities were obtained in the acetylation of alcohol 7 to give the ester product 43 (Scheme 11.11). A related dynamic kinetic resolution has been reported by Corberdn and Peris [18]. hi their chemistry, the aldehyde 46 is readily racemised and the iridium NHC catalyst 35 catalyses the reversible reduction of aldehyde 46 to give an alcohol which is acylated by an enzyme to give the ester 47 in reasonable enantiomeric excess. [Pg.258]

One most important observation for the mechanistic discussion is the oxidative addition/insertion/reductive elimination processes of the iridium complex (31) (Scheme 1-10) [62]. The oxidative addition of catecholborane yields an octahedral iridium-boryl complex (32) which allows the anti-Markovnikov insertion of alkyne into the H-Ir bond giving a l-alkenyliridium(III) intermediate (34). The electron-... [Pg.12]


See other pages where Iridium reduction is mentioned: [Pg.86]    [Pg.314]    [Pg.1018]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.314]    [Pg.1018]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.453]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.118]    [Pg.742]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.91]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.497]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.226]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.37]    [Pg.79]    [Pg.158]    [Pg.180]    [Pg.99]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.207]    [Pg.357]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.177]    [Pg.182]   


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Iridium chloride reduction

Iridium complexes reduction

Iridium complexes reductive elimination

Iridium porphyrins reduction

Iridium tetrachloride, in modified Meerwein-Ponndorf reduction

Reduction with Iridium-Containing Catalysts

Reduction with iridium complexes

Reductive Elimination on Cobalt, Rhodium, and Iridium

Reductive amination with iridium catalysts

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