588-47-6Relevant articles and documents
Cobalt encapsulated in N?doped graphene sheet for one-pot reductive amination to synthesize secondary amines
Liu, Lin,Li, Wenxiu,Qi, Ran,Zhu, Qingqing,Li, Jing,Fang, Yuzhen,Kong, Xiangjin
, (2021/03/14)
To develop an efficient base-metal reductive amination catalyst for synthesis of secondary amines is still a major challenge. In this study, an efficient N-doped graphene sheet-coated cobalt catalyst (Co@CN-800) was developed through a simple pyrolysis process, which could gave 99.5 % yield of N-benzylaniline by one-pot reductive amination of nitrobenzene with benzaldehyde during at least 5 cycles. Catalyst characterization and control experiments confirmed that the robust catalytic performance of the catalyst is probably due to the synergy effect of in situ generated Co-Nx encapsulated in N?doped graphene layer and appropriate meso-pore structure. Additionally, The substrate adaptability of the catalyst was proved since a variety of corresponding secondary amines were smoothly obtained under relatively mild conditions, which makes the secondary amine synthesis strategy based on Co@CN-800 shows excellent application prospect.
Reductive amination of ketones/aldehydes with amines using BH3N(C2H5)3as a reductant
Zou, Qizhuang,Liu, Fei,Zhao, Tianxiang,Hu, Xingbang
supporting information, p. 8588 - 8591 (2021/09/04)
Herein, we report the first example of efficient reductive amination of ketones/aldehydes with amines using BH3N(C2H5)3 as a catalyst and a reductant under mild conditions, affording various tertiary and secondary amines in excellent yields. A mechanistic study indicates that BH3N(C2H5)3 plays a dual function role of promoting imine and iminium formation and serving as a reductant in reductive amination. This journal is
Direct N-Alkylation/Fluoroalkylation of Amines Using Carboxylic Acids via Transition-Metal-Free Catalysis
Lu, Chunlei,Qiu, Zetian,Xuan, Maojie,Huang, Yan,Lou, Yongjia,Zhu, Yiling,Shen, Hao,Lin, Bo-Lin
supporting information, p. 4151 - 4158 (2020/08/21)
A scalable protocol of direct N-mono/di-alkyl/fluoroalkylation of primary/secondary amines has been constructed with various carboxylic acids as coupling agents under the catalysis of a simple air-tolerant inorganic salt, K3PO4. Advantageous features include 100 examples, 10 drugs and drug-like amines, fluorinated complex tertiary amines, gram-scale synthesis and isotope-labelling amine, thus demonstrating the potential applicability in industry of this methodology. The involvement of relatively less reactive silicon-hydride compared with the traditional reactive metal-hydride or boron-hydride species required to reduce the amide intermediates presumably contributes to the remarkable functional group compatibility. (Figure presented.).