Despite a well-developed and growing body of work in copper catalysis, the potential of copper to serve as a photocatalyst remains underexplored. Herein, we describe a photoinduced, copper-catalyzed method for coupling readily available racemic tertiary alkyl chloride electrophiles with amines to generate fully substituted stereocenters with high enantioselectivity. The reaction proceeds at –40 °C under excitation by a blue light-emitting diode and benefits from the use of a single, Earth-abundant transition metal acting as both the photocatalyst and the source of asymmetric induction. An enantioconvergent mechanism transforms the racemic starting material into a single product enantiomer.
The work-up of chemical reactions by standard techniques is often time consuming and energy demanding, especially when chemists have to guarantee low levels of metal contamination in the products. Therefore, scientists need new ideas to rapidly purify reaction mixtures that are both economically and environmentally benign. One intriguing approach is to tether functionalities that are required to perform organic reactions to magnetic nanoparticles, for example, catalysts, reagents, scavengers, or chelators. This strategy allows researchers to quickly separate active agents from reaction mixtures by exploiting the magnetic properties of the support. In this Account, we discuss the main attributes of magnetic supports and describe how we can make the different nanomagnets accessible by surface functionalization. Arguably the most prominent magnetic nanoparticles are superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) due to their biologically well-accepted constituents, their established size-selective synthesis methods, and their diminished agglomeration (no residual magnetic attraction in the absence of an external magnetic field). However, nanoparticles made of pure metal have a considerably higher magnetization level that is useful in applications where high loadings are needed. A few layers of carbon can efficiently shield such highly reactive metal nanoparticles and, equally important, enable facile covalent functionalization via diazonium chemistry or non-covalent functionalization through π-π interactions. We highlight carbon-coated cobalt (Co/C) and iron (Fe/C) nanoparticles in this Account and compare them to SPIONs stabilized with surfactants or silica shells. The graphene-like coating of these nanoparticles offers only low loadings with functional groups via direct surface modification, and the resulting nanomagnets are prone to agglomeration without effective steric stabilization. To overcome these restrictions and to tune the dispersibility of the magnetic supports in different solvents, we can introduce dendrimers and polymers on Co/C and Fe/C platforms by various synthetic strategies. While dendrimers have the advantage of being able to array all functional groups on the surface, polymers need fewer synthetic steps and higher molecular weight analogues are easily accessible. We present the application of these promising hybrid materials for the extraction of analytes or contaminates from complex aqueous solutions (e.g. waste water treatments or blood analytics), for metal-, organo-, and biocatalysis, and in organic synthesis. In addition, we describe advanced concepts like magnetic protecting groups, a multistep synthesis solely applying magnetic reagents and scavengers, and thermoresponsive self-separating magnetic catalysts. We also discuss the first examples of the use of magnetic scaffolds manipulated by external magnetic fields in flow reactors on the laboratory scale. These hold promise for future applications of magnetic hybrid materials in continuous flow or highly parallelized syntheses with...
Palladium nanoparticles are deposited on the surface of highly magnetic carbon‐coated cobalt nanoparticles. In contrast to the established synthesis of Pd nanoparticles via reduction of Pd(II) precursors, the microwave decomposition of a Pd(0) source leads to a more efficient Pd deposition, resulting in a material with considerably higher activity in the hydrogenation of alkenes. Systematic variation of the Pd loading on the carbon‐coated cobalt nanoparticle surface reveals a distinct trend to higher activities with decreased loading of Pd. The activity of the catalyst is further improved by the addition of 10 vol% Et2O to iso‐propanol that is found to be the solvent of choice. With respect to activity (turnover frequencies up to 11 095 h−1), handling, recyclability through magnetic decantation, and leaching of Pd (≤6 ppm/cycle), this novel magnetic hybrid material compares favorably to conventional Pd/C or Pd@CNT catalysts.
Carbon coated cobalt nanoparticles were tagged with azabis(oxazoline)−copper(II) complexes utilizing a copper(I)-catalyzed azide/alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) reaction, and the efficacy of the resulting nanomagnetic catalyst was tested in the kinetic resolution of racemic 1,2-diphenylethane-1,2-diol via asymmetric monobenzoylation. The novel semiheterogeneous catalyst was examined under batch conditions and in a continuous flow-type reactor. The extremely high ferromagnetism of the cobalt cores not only facilitates the recycling of the nanobeads via magnetic decantation in the batch reactions but also enables a novel continuous flow-reactor design: This further allowed efficient agitation and containment of the particles to occur without the need for sophisticated separation strategies such as nanofiltration.
A general method for the synthesis of multifunctional carbon nanomaterials following an unprecedented combined covalent and noncovalent immobilization strategy is reported. Highly magnetic (158 emu/g) carbon-coated cobalt nanoparticles (Co/C) served as scaffold for noncovalent functionalization of pyrene-tagged boradiazaindacene (BODIPY) fluorescent dye through π–π stacking interactions. Next to the reversibly immobilized pyrene-tagged dye, fully covalent functionalization of the magnetic core/shell nanoparticles was accomplished by grafting dendrimers via diazonium/“click”-chemistry. Alternatively, the nanoparticle surface could be covalently functionalized with BODIPY dye following same procedure. The Co/C nanomagnets labeled with fluorescent dye were further examined by confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). Because of the strong fluorescence and magnetic remanence, this material might be interesting for imaging applications and as a nanosized carrier for reversibly attached drugs.
The utilization of a monomer-on-monomer (MoM) intramolecular Mitsunobu cyclization reaction employing norbornenyl-tagged (Nb-tagged) reagents is reported for the synthesis of benzofused thiadiazepine-dioxides. Facile purification was achieved via ring-opening metathesis (ROM) polymerization initiated by one of three metathesis catalyst methods: (i) free metathesis catalyst, (ii) surface-initiated catalyst-armed silica, or (iii) surface-initiated catalyst-armed Co/C magnetic nanoparticles.
Unprecedented magnetic borohydride exchange (mBER), magnetic Wang aldehyde (mWang) and magnetic amine resins were prepared from highly magnetic polymer-coated cobalt or iron nanoparticles. Microwave irradiation was used to obtain excellent degrees of functionalization (>95 %) and loadings (up to 3.0 mmol g(-1)) in short reaction times of 15 min or less. A small library of ureas and thioureas was synthesized by the exclusive application of these magnetic resins. As a first step, a reductive amination of aromatic and aliphatic aldehydes was carried out with mBER. The excess of primary amine needed to complete the reaction was subsequently scavenged selectively by mWang. Simple magnetic decantation from the resins resulted in secondary amines in good to excellent yields and purities. The used magnetic resins were efficiently regenerated and reused for the next run. In a second step, the secondary amines were converted to trisubstituted (thio)ureas in excellent yields and purities by stirring with an excess of iso(thio)cyanate, which was scavenged by addition of the magnetic amine resin after completion of the reaction. The whole reaction sequence is carried out without any purification apart from magnetic decantation; moreover, conventional magnetic stirring can be used as opposed to the vortexing required for polystyrene resins.
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