In this study, two stereocomplementary ω-transaminases from
Arthrobacter
sp. (AsR-ωTA) and
Chromobacterium violaceum
(Cv-ωTA) were immobilized via iron cation affinity binding onto polymer-coated controlled porosity glass beads (EziG™). The immobilization procedure was studied with different types of carrier materials and immobilization buffers of varying compositions, concentrations, pHs and cofactor (PLP) concentrations. Notably, concentrations of PLP above 0.1 mM were correlated with a dramatic decrease of the immobilization yield. The highest catalytic activity, along with quantitative immobilization, was obtained in MOPS buffer (100mM, pH 8.0, PLP 0.1 mM, incubation time 2 h). Leaching of the immobilized enzyme was not observed within 3 days of incubation. EziG-immobilized AsR-ωTA and Cv-ωTA retained elevated activity when tested for the kinetic resolution of rac-α-methylbenzylamine (rac-α-MBA) in single batch experiments. Recycling studies demonstrated that immobilized EziG
3
-AsR-ωTA could be recycled for at least 16 consecutive cycles (15min per cycle) and always affording quantitative conversion (TON ca. 14,400). Finally, the kinetic resolution of rac-α-MBA with EziG
3
-AsR-ωTA was tested in a continuous flow packed-bed reactor (157 µL reactor volume), which produced more than 5
g
of (
S
)-α-MBA (> 49% conversion, > 99% ee) in 96 h with no detectable loss of catalytic activity. The calculated TON was more than 110,000 along with a space-time yield of 335 g L
−1
h
−1
.
The activation of dioxygen for selective oxidation of organic molecules is a major catalytic challenge. Inspired by the activity of nitrogen-doped carbons in electrocatalytic oxygen reduction, we combined such a carbon with metal-oxide catalysts to yield cooperative catalysts. These simple materials boost the catalytic oxidation of several alcohols, using molecular oxygen at atmospheric pressure and low temperature (80 °C). Cobalt and copper oxide demonstrate the highest activities. The high activity and selectivity of these catalysts arises from the cooperative action of their components, as proven by various control experiments and spectroscopic techniques. We propose that the reaction should not be viewed as occurring at an 'active site', but rather at an 'active doughnut'-the volume surrounding the base of a carbon-supported metal-oxide particle.
We study the allylic oxidation of cyclohexene with O2 under mild conditions in the presence of transition‐metal catalysts. The catalysts comprise nanometric metal oxide particles supported on porous N‐doped carbons (M/N:C, M=V, Cr, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Nb, Mo, W). Most of these metal oxides give only moderate conversions, and the majority of the products are over‐oxidation products. Co/N:C and Cu/N:C, however, give 70–80 % conversion and 40–50 % selectivity to the ketone product, cyclohexene‐2‐one. Control experiments in which we used free‐radical scavengers show that the oxidation follows the expected free‐radical pathway in almost all cases. Surprisingly, the catalytic cycle in the presence of Cu/N:C does not involve free‐radical species in solution. Optimisation of this catalyst gives >85 % conversion with >60 % selectivity to the allylic ketone at 70 °C and 10 bar O2. We used SEM, X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy and XRD to show that the active particles have a cupric oxide/cuprous oxide core–shell structure, giving a high turnover frequency of approximately 1500 h−1. We attribute the high performance of this Cu/N:C catalyst to a facile surface reaction between adsorbed cyclohexenyl hydroperoxide molecules and activated oxygen species.
We present a new device for quantifying gases or gas mixtures based on the simple principle of bubble counting. With this device, we can follow reaction kinetics down to volume step sizes of 8–12 μL. This enables the accurate determination of both time and size of these gas quanta, giving a very detailed kinetic analysis. We demonstrate this method and device using ammonia borane hydrolysis as a model reaction, obtaining Arrhenius plots with over 300 data points from a single experiment. Our device not only saves time and avoids frustration, but also offers more insight into reaction kinetics and mechanistic studies. Moreover, its simplicity and low cost open opportunities for many lab applications.
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