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Nickel-complex-catalyzed reactions hydrogenation

Nickel is frequently used in industrial homogeneous catalysis. Many carbon-carbon bond-formation reactions can be carried out with high selectivity when catalyzed by organonickel complexes. Such reactions include linear and cyclic oligomerization and polymerization reactions of monoenes and dienes, and hydrocyanation reactions [1], Many of the complexes that are active catalysts for oligomerization and isomerization reactions are supposed also to be active as hydrogenation catalysts. [Pg.96]

Another example is butene dimerization catalyzed by nickel complexes in acidic chloroaluminates 14). This reaction has been performed on a continuous basis on the pilot scale by IFF (Difasol process). Relative to the industrial process involving homogeneous catalysis (Dimersol process), the overall yield in dimers is increased. Similarly, selective hydrogenation of diene can be performed in ionic liquids, because the solubility of dienes is higher than that of monoene, which is higher than that of paraffins. In the case of the Difasol process, a reduction of the volume of the reaction section by a factor of up to 40 can be achieved. This new Difasol technology enables lower dimer (e.g., octenes) production costs 14). [Pg.156]

Addition of hydrogen cyanide to a terminal alkene is catalyzed principally by nickel and palladium complexes. The reaction may give either linear or branched products (equation 161). The reaction is of considerable industrial interest. A review on the earlier work is available.599... [Pg.296]

Scheme 1 a The [2 + 2] cycloaddition product of prochiral trans 2-butene with Si dimers of the Si(100) surface leads to chiral adsorbate complexes, b Hydrogenation of prochiral a-keto esters over platinum is a heterogeneously catalyzed reaction leading to chiral alcohols. Using cinchonidin as chiral modifier makes this surface reaction enantioselective. In a similar fashion, TA-modified nickel is a highly enantioselective catalyst for /3-keto ester hydrogenation... [Pg.223]

The hydroformylation of alkenes is commonly run using soluble metal carbonyl complexes as catalysts but there are some reports of heterogeneously catalyzed reactions of olefins with hydrogen and carbon monoxide. Almost all of these are vapor phase reactions of ethylene or propylene with hydrogen and carbon monoxide catalyzed by rhodium, " 20 ruthenium,nickel, 22,123 cobalt, 23,124 and cobalt-molybdenum 23 catalysts as well as various sulfided metal catalysts. 23,125,126... [Pg.596]

There are two possible pathways to homologate methanol with carbon dioxide the CO2 insertion path and CO insertion path (Scheme 2). As for the former, Fukuoka et al. reported that the cobalt-ruthenium or nickel bimetallic complex catalyzed acetic acid formation from methyl iodide, carbon dioxide and hydrogen, in which carbon dioxide inserted into the carbon-metal bond to form acetate complex [7]. However, the contribution of this path is rather small because no acetic acid or its derivatives are detected in this reaction. Besides, the time course... [Pg.497]

The most outstanding example for the applieation of homogeneously catalyzed hydrocyanation is the DuPont adiponitrile process. About 75 % of the world s demand for adiponitrile is covered by hydrocyanation of butadiene in the presence of nickel(O) phosphite species. This process is discussed for the addition of HCN to dienes as an example, because in this case a well-founded set of data is available. Though it was Taylor and Swift who referred to hydrocyanation of butadiene for the first time [45], it was to Drinkard s credit that this principle was fully exploited for the development of the DuPont adiponitrile process [18]. The overall process is described as the addition of two equivalents of HCN to butadiene in the presence of a tetrakisphosphite-nickel(O) catalyst and a Lewis acid promoter. A phosphine-containing ligand system for the catalyst is not suitable, since addition of HCN to the tetrakisphosphine-nickel complex results in the formation of hydrogen and the non-aetive dicyano complex [67], In general the reaction can... [Pg.481]

The mechanism of hydrocyanation of alkenes catalyzed by soluble complexes is closely related to the mechanism of hydrogenation and hydrosilation. Hydrocyanation occurs by a sequence consisting of oxidative addition of HCN, olefin insertion into the M-H bond, and reductive elimination to form the new C-C bond. The mechanism of the original hydrocyanation catalyzed by cobalt carbonyl has not been studied in depth, but the mechanism of the reactions catalyzed by nickel complexes has been studied in depth and is better defined. [Pg.670]

A proposed mechanism [9] for the hydrosilylation of olefins catalyzed by platinum(II) complexes (chloroplatinic acid is thought to be reduced to a plati-num(II) species in the early stages of the catalytic reaction) is similar to that for the rhodium(I) complex-catalyzed hydrogenation of olefins, which was advanced mostly by Wilkinson and his co-workers [10]. Besides the Speier s catalyst, it has been shown that tertiary phosphine complexes of nickel [11], palladium [12], platinum [13], and rhodium [14] are also effective as catalysts, and homogeneous catalysis by these Group VIII transition metal complexes is our present concern. In addition, as we will see later, hydrosilanes with chlorine, alkyl or aryl substituents on silicon show their characteristic reactivities in the metal complex-catalyzed hydrosilylation. Therefore, it seems appropriate to summarize here briefly recent advances in elucidation of the catalysis by metal complexes, including activation of silicon-hydrogen bonds. [Pg.187]


See other pages where Nickel-complex-catalyzed reactions hydrogenation is mentioned: [Pg.129]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.267]    [Pg.121]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.224]    [Pg.97]    [Pg.102]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.593]    [Pg.355]    [Pg.213]    [Pg.99]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.154]    [Pg.1068]    [Pg.1230]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.212]    [Pg.258]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.65]    [Pg.177]    [Pg.846]    [Pg.221]    [Pg.1068]    [Pg.4522]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.117]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.300]   


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Complex hydrogenation catalyzed

Hydrogen catalyzed

Hydrogen complexes

Hydrogen complexes, reactions

Hydrogenation complexes

Hydrogenation, catalyzed

Nickel complexes hydrogenation

Nickel hydrogen

Nickel-catalyzed

Nickel-catalyzed reaction

Nickel-complex-catalyzed reactions

Reaction nickel

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