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Resin supported catalysts

The process has also been adapted using resin supported catalysts [e.g. 23-28]. Generally, the reactivity of the alkyl halides follows the normal pattern of I>Br>Cl, but secondary alkyl halides are less reactive and require high reaction temperatures and tertiary alkyl halides fail to react. [Pg.87]

A critical advance in the development of metal-promoted [671+271] cycloaddition as a synthetic tool occurred with the implementation of the heterogeneous catalyst 46 (Scheme 13) [26]. Polymeric complex46 is easily accessible from commercial starting materials. It was established that the resin-supported catalyst 46 displays essentially the same efficiency as its homogeneous counterparts. [Pg.190]

The basie steps involved in reactions with resin-supported PTC catalysts differ from ordinary two-phase PTC reactions in one important respect ordinary PTC reactions require only one reagent to be transferred from their normal phase to the phase of the second reactant. Use of resin-supported catalysts requires that both reagents diffuse to active PTC sites on the eatalyst surface, or for reactions with slow intrinsic rates, both reagents must also diffuse to the active sites inside the resin bulk phase. The need for diffusion processes with solid catalysts also means that both reagents are required to diffuse to and penetrate the stagnant outer layer of liquid(s) (the Nemst layer), coating the catalyst particle. [Pg.831]

Scheme 10 Schematic representation of synthesis of resin-supported catalyst 1... Scheme 10 Schematic representation of synthesis of resin-supported catalyst 1...
The Jacobsen group has also shown that the recycling of the resin-bounded catalyst can be successfully performed [152,154]. Moreover, they have developed an efficient method for the hydrolysis of the aminonitrile into the corresponding amino acid. This method was apphed for the commercial production of optically active K-amino acids at Rhodia ChiRex (e.g. tert-leucine) the catalyst was immobihsed on a resin support (4 mol %, 10 cycles) and the intermediate hydrocyanation adduct was trapped by simply replacing TFAA with HCOOH/AC2O, for example. Highly crystalhne formamide derivatives were thus obtained in excellent yields (97-98% per cycle) with very high enantioselectivities (92-93% per cycle) [158]. [Pg.259]

While the control resins were deep red in color due to the presence of soluble porphyrin complexes, the methacrylate resins obtained after removal of the polyethylene-supported catalysts varied from light yellow to nearly water-white (APHA < 25). UV-Vis spectrophotometric analysis of the yellow resins indicated an absorption signal for the cobalt porphyrin complex Soret band (wavelength of cobalt(ll) porphyrin species appears at -415 nm free porphyrin ligand is formd at -423 tun). Resin samples that visttally appear as water-white show little or no porphyrin species present in the spectrum. Measured catalyst activity and PDl of the polyethylene-supported porphyrin complexes are in the expected range for soluble porphyrin CCT catalysts (PDl = M /Mn - 1.2- 2.0)." The screening resrrlts clearly... [Pg.324]

Rhodium also has been reported as a catalyst for [2+2+2] alkyne cycloaddition in water. Uozumi et al. explored the use of an amphiphilic resin-supported rhodium-phosphine complex as catalyst (Eq. 4.60). The immobilized rhodium catalyst was effective for the [2+2+2] cycloaddition of internal alkynes in water,113 although the yields of products were not satisfactory. [Pg.131]

Polymer-supported catalysts often have lower activities than the soluble catalysts because of the intraparticle diffusion resistance. In this case the immobilization of the complexes on colloidal polymers can increase the catalytic activity. Catalysts bound to polymer latexes were used in oxidation reactions, such as the Cu-catalyzed oxidation of ascorbic acid,12 the Co-catalyzed oxidation of tetralin,13 and the CoPc-catalyzed oxidation of butylphenol14 and thiols.1516 Mn(III)-porphyrin bound to colloidal anion exchange resin was... [Pg.248]

In a more recent study, Wang and coworkers have discussed microwave-assisted Suzuki couplings employing a reusable polymer-supported palladium complex [141]. The supported catalyst was prepared from commercial Merrifield polystyrene resin under ultrasound Bonification. In a typical procedure for biaryl synthesis, 1 mmol of the requisite aryl bromide together with 1.1 equivalents of the phenyl-boronic acid, 2.5 equivalents of potassium carbonate, and 10 mg of the polystyrene-... [Pg.376]

Amphiphilic resin supported ruthenium(II) complexes similar to those displayed in structure 1 were employed as recyclable catalysts for dimethylformamide production from supercritical C02 itself [96]. Tertiary phosphines were attached to crosslinked polystyrene-poly(ethyleneglycol) graft copolymers (PS-PEG resin) with amino groups to form an immobilized chelating phosphine. In this case recycling was not particularly effective as catalytic activity declined with each subsequent cycle, probably due to oxidation of the phosphines and metal leaching. [Pg.231]

However, styrene and cyclohexene gave complex product mixtures, and 1-octene did not react under the same reaction conditions. Thus, the activity of this catalyst is intrinsically low. Jacobs and co-workers [159,160] applied Veturello s catalyst [PO WCKOj ]3- (tethered on a commercial nitrate-form resin with alkylammonium cations) to the epoxidation of allylic alcohols and terpenes. The regio- and diastereoselectivity of the parent homogeneous catalysts were preserved in the supported catalyst. For bulky alkenes, the reactivity of the POM catalyst was superior to that of Ti-based catalysts with large pore sizes such as Ti-p and Ti-MCM-48. The catalytic activity of the recycled catalyst was completely maintained after several cycles and the filtrate was catalytically inactive, indicating that the observed catalysis is truly heterogeneous in nature. [Pg.482]

An alternative strategy for catalyst immobilisation uses ion-pair interactions between ionic catalyst complexes and polymeric ion exchange resins. Since all the rhodium complexes in the catalytic methanol carbonylation cycle are anionic, this is an attractive candidate for ionic attachment. In 1981, Drago et al. described the effective immobilisation of the rhodium catalyst on polymeric supports based on methylated polyvinylpyridines [48]. The activity was reported to be equal to the homogeneous system at 120 °C with minimal leaching of the supported catalyst. The ionically bound complex [Rh(CO)2l2] was identified by infrared spectroscopic analysis of the impregnated resin. [Pg.201]

Buchwald has shown that, in combination with palladium(II) acetate or Pd2(dba)3 [tris(dibenzylideneacetone)dipalladium], the Merrifield resin-bound electron-rich dialkylphosphinobiphenyl ligand (45) (Scheme 4.29) forms the active polymer-supported catalysts for amination and Suzuki reactions [121]. Inactivated aryl iodides, bromides, or even chlorides can be employed as substrates in these reactions. The catalyst derived from ligand (45) and a palladium source can be recycled for both amination and Suzuki reactions without addition of palladium. [Pg.227]

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]


See other pages where Resin supported catalysts is mentioned: [Pg.210]    [Pg.214]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.189]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.214]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.189]    [Pg.399]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.224]    [Pg.226]    [Pg.324]    [Pg.104]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.360]    [Pg.382]    [Pg.39]    [Pg.42]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.181]    [Pg.702]    [Pg.1444]    [Pg.1445]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.45]    [Pg.204]    [Pg.207]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.19 , Pg.20 , Pg.87 , Pg.89 , Pg.91 , Pg.140 , Pg.141 ]




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