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Palladium resin-supported

Figure 7. SEM and XRMA microphotographs of palladium catalysts supported on the amphiphilic resin made by DMAA, MTEA, MBAA (cross-linker) [30]. Microphotographs (a) and (b) show an image and the radial palladium distribution after uptake of [Pd(OAc)2] from water/acetone the precursor diffuses only into the outer layer of the relatively little swollen CFP after reduction the nanoclusters remain close to the edge of the catalyst beads. Microphotographs (c) and (d) show the radial distribution of sulfur and palladium, respectively, after uptake of [PdCU] from water after reduction palladium is homogenously distributed throughout the catalyst particles. This indicates that under these conditions the CFP was swollen enough to allow the metal precursor to readily penetrate the whole of polymeric mass. (Reprinted from Ref. [30], 2005, with permission from Elsevier.)... Figure 7. SEM and XRMA microphotographs of palladium catalysts supported on the amphiphilic resin made by DMAA, MTEA, MBAA (cross-linker) [30]. Microphotographs (a) and (b) show an image and the radial palladium distribution after uptake of [Pd(OAc)2] from water/acetone the precursor diffuses only into the outer layer of the relatively little swollen CFP after reduction the nanoclusters remain close to the edge of the catalyst beads. Microphotographs (c) and (d) show the radial distribution of sulfur and palladium, respectively, after uptake of [PdCU] from water after reduction palladium is homogenously distributed throughout the catalyst particles. This indicates that under these conditions the CFP was swollen enough to allow the metal precursor to readily penetrate the whole of polymeric mass. (Reprinted from Ref. [30], 2005, with permission from Elsevier.)...
This argument is confirmed by the study of CO pulse chemisorption by Biffis at al., mentioned above. In this piece of investigation, the authors prepared a 2% (w/w) palladium catalyst supported by Lewatit UCP 118, a macroreticular resin (nominal cld = 18 %) from Bayer. Its TEM characterization showed a remarkably heterogeneous distribution of the metal nanoclusters, which are apparently located close to the surface of the polymer nodules [62] (Figure 9). [Pg.211]

Synthesis (TCS). The very same term was independently proporsed by Corain and associates for the size controlled synthesis of palladium nanoparticles in 2004 [68]. In a number of cases they observed that palladium nanoclusters, supported on gel-type resins of different nature and obtained with the RIMP method, exhibited a remarkable agreement between the size of the cavities of swollen supports (as assessed by means of ISEC, see Section 4) and the diameter of the metal nanoclusters (Table 4, Entries 1-3) [10,11,66,71,72,87]. [Pg.215]

Other important examples of immobilized palladium catalysts (48)-(50) which were employed in Heck, Suzuki-Miyaura and allylic alkylation reactions are summarized in Fig. 4.4 [123]. Catalyst (49) is particularly noteworthy as it is a recyc-able amphiphilic resin-supported P,N-chelating Pd-complex which performs asymmetric allylic alkylations in water. [Pg.228]

Colloidal palladium or platinum supported on chelate resin beads were employed for the stereoselective hydrogenation of olefins 86). Colloidal palladium supported on iminodiacetic acid type chelate resin beads was prepared by refluxing the palladium chloride and the chelate resin beads in methanol-water. Using the resin-supported colloidal palladium as a catalyst, cyclopentadiene is hydrogenated to cyclopentene with 97.1% selectivity at 100 % conversion of cyclopentadiene under 1 atm of hydrogen in methanol at 30 °C. Finely dispersed metal particles ranging from 1 to 6 nm in diameter are the active species in the catalyst. [Pg.125]

Figure 6.1 Amphiphilic PS-PEG resin-supported palladium-phosphine complexes. Figure 6.1 Amphiphilic PS-PEG resin-supported palladium-phosphine complexes.
Scheme 6.3 Preparation of PS-PEG resin-supported chiral palladium complexes. Scheme 6.3 Preparation of PS-PEG resin-supported chiral palladium complexes.
Thus, the reaction of the cycloheptenyl carbonate 29 with 5 equivalents of dibenzylamine in the presence of 8mol% palladium of the PS-PEG resin-supported 23-Pd complex was carried out in THF or dichloromethane and showed no catalytic activity at 25 °C, whereas the same system in water proceeded smoothly to give 91% yield of the cycloheptenylamine 41a (Scheme 6.4). [Pg.218]

The reaction could not be carried out with the usual sulfonic acid ion-exchange resin, because its maximum use temperature was 120°C. The product cannot be made directly from acetone and aniline owing to the formation of a dihydroquinoline by-product (from two molecules of acetone and one of aniline). A shape-selective zeolite might allow the reaction to take place without formation of this byproduct. An inexpensive way of making this diamine from acetone and aniline, similar to the preparation of bisphenol A from acetone and phenol, could lead to new families of polyamides, polyimides, polyureas, polyurethanes, and epoxy resins. A palladium catalyst supported on Nafion dimerized ethylene much faster in water than in organic solvents. The butene was easy to separate.18... [Pg.138]

Although the first aim of the use of a water-soluble palladium catalyst in allylic alkylation in a two-phase system was the recycling of the catalyst, this methodology finds quite interesting applications in the deprotection of peptides as well as in the selective alkylation of uracils and thiouracils. More recently, the effective use of supported aqueous-phase catalysis as well as asymmetric alkylation in water in the presence of surfactants or amphiphilic resin-supported phosphines open new applications and developments for the future. [Pg.538]

A dendritic spacer of poly(aryl benzyl ether) was used for incorporation of phosphine ligands onto a PS resin support [116,117]. Thus, the condensation of 4-(diphenylphosphino)benzoic acid with Wang resin bearing poly(aryl benzyl ether) (generation 1-3) gave the PS-supported dendritic phosphine 86. Treatment of the dendritic phosphine 86 with Pd(dba)2 in THF afforded the bisphosphine-palladium complex 87 (Scheme 29) [ 118]. The PS-supported palladium complex exhibited a positive dendritic influence on the Heck reaction of bromobenzene with methyl acrylate. [Pg.99]

The peptide-based phosphine ligand 105 was identified from a polymer-supported phosphine library of 75 members [154]. Enantioposition-selective desymmetrization of the meso-cyclopentenediol derivative 100 was promoted by a palladium complex of 105 to afford the cyclic carbamate 101 with 76% ee. This result demonstrated that the combinatorial approach is effective in the lead-generation stage of stereoselective catalyst development [155, 156]. The resin-supported palladium complex of Ac-D-Phg-Pro-D-Val-Pps-D-Leu-NH resin 106, which has also been developed through the combinatorial approach. [Pg.105]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.315 , Pg.316 , Pg.317 , Pg.318 ]




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