4 research outputs found

    A chiral organocatalytic polymer-based monolithic reactor

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    Radical copolymerisation of divinylbenzene and a properly modified enantiomerically pure imidazolidinone inside a stainless steel column in the presence of dodecanol and toluene as porogens afforded the first example of a chiral organocatalyst immobilized onto a monolithic reactor. Organocatalyzed cycloadditions between cyclopentadiene and cinnamic aldehyde were performed under continuous-flow conditions; by optimizing the experimental set up, excellent enantioselectivities (90% ee at 25 [degree]C) and high productivities (higher than 330) were obtained, thus showing that a catalytic reactor may work efficiently to continuously produce enantiomerically enriched compounds. The same catalytic reactor was also employed to carry out three different stereoselective transformations in continuo, sequentially, inside the chiral column (Diels-Alder, 1,3-dipolar nitrone-olefin cycloaddition, and Friedel-Crafts alkylation); excellent results were obtained in the case of the former two reactions (up to 99% yield, 93% ee and 71% yield, 90% ee, at 25 [degree]C, respectively). In addition to simplify the product recovery, the monolithic reactor performed better than the same supported organocatalyst in a stirred flask and could be kept working continuously for more than 8 days

    Organocatalysts for enantioselective synthesis of fine chemicals: definitions, trends and developments

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    Organocatalysis, that is the use of small organic molecules to catalyse organic transformations, has been included among the most successful concepts in asymmetric catalysis and it has been used for the enantioselective construction of C-C, C-N, C-O, C-S, C-P, and C-halide bonds. Since the seminal works in early 2000, the scientific community has been paying an ever-growing attention to the use of organocatalysts for the synthesis, with high yields and remarkable stereoselectivities, of optically active fine chemicals of interest for the pharmaceutical industry. A brief overview is here presented about the two main classes of substrate activation by the catalyst: covalent organocatalysis and non-covalent organocatalysis, with a more stringent focus on some recent outcomes in the field of the latter and of hydrogen-bond-based catalysis. Finally, some successful examples of heterogenisation of organocatalysts are also discussed, in the view of a potential industrial exploitation

    Organocatalysts for enantioselective synthesis of fine chemicals: definitions, trends and developments

    No full text

    Organocatalysts for enantioselective synthesis of fine chemicals: definitions, trends and developments

    No full text
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