2027-17-0Relevant articles and documents
Isopropylation of naphthalene by isopropyl alcohol over USY catalyst: An investigation in the high-pressure fixed-bed flow reactor
Wang, Jun,Park, Jung-Nam,Park, Yong-Ki,Lee, Chul Wee
, p. 265 - 272 (2003)
Catalytic performances of USY, H-mordenite, dealuminated H-mordenite, and H-MCM-22 zeolite catalysts in the isopropylation of naphthalene by isopropyl alcohol with decalin or cyclohexane as a solvent were compared in a high-pressure fixed-bed flow reactor. For the USY catalyst, reaction conditions, such as reaction temperature and pressure, reactant ratio and space velocity, and solvent concentration and type, were controlled to investigate in detail the effect of reaction conditions on the catalytic activity. Over H-mordenite, it was found that 2,6-diisopropylnaphthalene (2,6-DIPN) could be selectively synthesized with a 2,6-/2,7-DIPN ratio of 2.46, and dealumination could enhance not only the selectivity of 2,6-DIPN, with a 2,6-/2,7-DIPN ratio of 2.67, but also the conversion of naphthalene, which was 27.4%, three times as high as that over the unmodified one at 6 h of reaction time on stream. However, neither the H-mordenite or the dealuminated one were catalytically stable and the selectivity of DIPN was at a very low level of less than 12%. In contrast, over the USY catalyst, a high and stable conversion of about 90%, a high selectivity of DIPN of more than 40%, and a considerable 2,6-/2,7-DIPN ratio of 1.46 could be achieved by adjusting the reaction conditions, although no shape selectivity was observed on USY. On the other hand, only a low 2,6-/2,7-DIPN ratio of 0.47 with a low conversion of about 30% was revealed over H-MCM-22, which indicates that the reaction takes place on the external surface of this zeolite. An attempt has been made to explain the catalytic activity, selectivity, and stability in relation to the zeolite structures, product properties, and reaction conditions.
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Price,Ciskowski
, p. 2499,2502 (1938)
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Dialkylation of naphthalene with isopropanol over H3PO 4/MCM-41 Catalysts for the environmentally friendly synthesis of 2,6-dialkylnaphthalene
Ghiaci,Aghabarari,Rives,Vicente,Sobrados,Sanz
, p. 141 - 149 (2010)
AlMCM-41 materials with SiO2/Al2O3 molar ratios 20, 70, 110, 150, 200, and Si-MCM-41 were synthesized following standard procedures, and loaded with different amounts of H3PO4. The catalysts were well
Mechanistic Study of Domino Processes Involving the Bidentate Lewis Acid Catalyzed Inverse Electron-Demand Diels?Alder Reaction
Strauss, Marcel A.,Kohrs, Daniel,Ruhl, Julia,Wegner, Hermann A.
, p. 3866 - 3873 (2021)
The detailed understanding of mechanisms is the basis to design new reactions. Herein, we studied the domino bidentate Lewis acid catalyzed inverse electron-demand Diels?Alder (IEDDA) reaction developed in our laboratory computationally as well as by synthetic experiments, to characterize different pathways. A quinodimethane intermediate was identified as key structure, which is the basis for all subsequent transformations: Elimination to an aromatic naphthalene, rearrangement to a dihydroaminonaphthalene and a photo-induced ring opening. These insights allow to optimize the reaction conditions, such as catalytic utilization of amine, as well as to advance new reactions in the future.
Isopropylation of naphthalene by isopropanol over conventional and Zn- and Fe-modified USY zeolites
Banu, Marimuthu,Lee, Young Hye,Magesh, Ganesan,Lee, Jae Sung
, p. 120 - 128 (2014)
Catalytic performances of USY, MOR, and BEA zeolites were compared for the isopropylation of naphthalene by isopropyl alcohol in a high-pressure, fixed-bed reactor. The USY catalyst showed a high conversion of 86% and good stability but a low 2,6-/2,7-DIPN shape selectivity ratio of 0.94. In contrast, over the MOR catalyst, 2,6-DIPN was selectively synthesized with a high 2,6-/2,7-DIPN ratio of 1.75, but low naphthalene conversions and fast deactivation of the catalyst were observed. The USY catalyst was modified by Zn and Fe using the wet impregnation method to enhance the selectivity for 2,6-DIPN. The highest conversion (~95%) and selectivity for 2,6-DIPN (~20%) were achieved with 4% Zn/USY catalyst. It appeared that small metal oxide islands formed in the USY pores to decrease the effective pore size and thus render it mildly shape-selective. Zn loading also decreased the number of strong acid sites responsible for coke formation and increased the number of weak acid sites. The high conversion and stability of Zn-modified catalysts were ascribed to the presence of a suitable admixture of weak and strong acid sites with less coke deposition. The Fe-modified USY catalysts were less effective because the modification increased the number of the strong acid sites.
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Roux
, p. 338 (1887)
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Zeolite pore entrance effect on shape selectivity in naphthalene isopropylation
Brzozowski,Skupinski
, p. 313 - 318 (2002)
Naphthalene alkylation with propylene was studied over various large-pore zeolites and also over amorphous aluminosilicate catalysts. Isomeric distribution of isopropylnaphthalenes (IPN) and diisopropylnaphthalenes (DIPN) were compared at different temperatures. The shape-selectivity effect that occurred in the entrances to the pores could be responsible for high α-selectivity in monoisopropylation and 1NR-selectivity in diisopropylation observed in the naphthalene alkylation over wide pore zeolites. The product was then relatively rich in 1-IPN, 1,3-DIPN, and 1,4-DIPN. This type of shape selectivity suppressed other shape-selectivity effects, e.g., high β-selectivity of reactions occurring inside channels or cavities of the zeolite. High concentration of TIPN in alkylation products could be explained superbly with the help of catalysis in pore entrances. The explanation of such results was proposed to be a specific shape-selectivity effect of alkylation reaction occurring in the entrances to the pores of zeolite.
Factors affecting the selection of products from a photochemically generated singlet biradical
Broyles, David A.,Carpenter, Barry K.
, p. 1757 - 1767 (2005)
The chemistries of a monoradical of the ultrafast "radical-clock" type and a structurally related singlet biradical, generated by Norrish type II photochemistry, are compared. The monoradical is found to undergo the characteristic ring-opening reaction of its class at about 1010 s-1 at room temperature. However, the singlet biradical shows no evidence of the analogous ring-opening reaction. The contrasting chemistry is traced not to a fundamental difference in electronic structure of the two intermediates, but rather to a steric interaction that the biradical alone would have to suffer during the ring opening. Although the magnitude of the steric hindrance is small (estimated 15-20 kJ mol-1), it is enough to shut down the reaction, because the biradical has other facile product-forming reactions available. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2005.
Ambient Hydrogenation and Deuteration of Alkenes Using a Nanostructured Ni-Core–Shell Catalyst
Beller, Matthias,Feng, Lu,Gao, Jie,Jackstell, Ralf,Jagadeesh, Rajenahally V.,Liu, Yuefeng,Ma, Rui
supporting information, p. 18591 - 18598 (2021/06/28)
A general protocol for the selective hydrogenation and deuteration of a variety of alkenes is presented. Key to success for these reactions is the use of a specific nickel-graphitic shell-based core–shell-structured catalyst, which is conveniently prepared by impregnation and subsequent calcination of nickel nitrate on carbon at 450 °C under argon. Applying this nanostructured catalyst, both terminal and internal alkenes, which are of industrial and commercial importance, were selectively hydrogenated and deuterated at ambient conditions (room temperature, using 1 bar hydrogen or 1 bar deuterium), giving access to the corresponding alkanes and deuterium-labeled alkanes in good to excellent yields. The synthetic utility and practicability of this Ni-based hydrogenation protocol is demonstrated by gram-scale reactions as well as efficient catalyst recycling experiments.
Chemoselective Deoxygenation of 2° Benzylic Alcohols through a Sequence of Formylation and B(C6F5)3-Catalyzed Reduction
Oestreich, Martin,Richter, Sven C.
supporting information, p. 2103 - 2106 (2021/07/22)
A sequence of formylation and B(C6F5)3-catalyzed reduction of the resulting formate with Et3SiH enables the chemoselective deoxygenation of secondary benzylic alcohols. Primary benzylic and tertiary non-benzylic alcohols are not reduced by this protocol. The formyl group fulfills a double role as activator and self-sacrificing protecting group. The deoxygenation of these formates is fast and can be carried out in the presence of other potentially reducible groups. Neighboring-group participation was found in the deoxygenation of certain diol motifs.