Water‐Soluble Ligands, Metal Complexes, and Catalysts: Synergism of Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Catalysis
- 1 November 1993
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English
- Vol. 32 (11) , 1524-1544
- https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.199315241
Abstract
Rapid developments in the field of catalysis are leading to an increased demand for tailor‐made catalysts. Water‐soluble complex catalysts, which are being intensively investigated at the present time, combine the advantages of homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis: simple and complete separation of the product from the catalyst, high activity, and high selectivity. From the large number of available water‐soluble ligands, the appropriate catalysts can be developed for many reactions. The industrial applications in the fields of hydrogenation and hydroformylation have already indicated the wide scope of this type of catalyst. In addition, the annual production of 300 000 tons of butyraldehyde through application of water‐soluble rhodium complexes at Hoechst AG in Oberhausen, Germany, has demonstrated the industrial importance of the concept of complex‐catalyzed reactions in aqueous two‐phase systems. The efficient operation of catalytic processes increasingly requires the loss‐free recycling of the noble metal catalyst, and this can be simply and economically realized in two‐phase systems. Special applications in biochemical problems open up developments in the field of water‐soluble transition metal complexes that far transcend the familiar kinds of homogeneous catalysis. In the near future, the investigation and application of metal complex catalysts that are compatible with the physiological, cheap, and environmentally friendly solvent, water, is likely to become a high priority in catalysis research.Keywords
This publication has 171 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ein neuer Zugang zu wasserlöslichen Phosphanen mit para‐sulfonierten Phenylsubstituenten ‐ Kristallstruktur von P(C6H4‐p‐SO3K) 3 · KCI · 0.5 H2OAngewandte Chemie, 1993
- Herstellung von hydrolysestabilen Ammoniumsalzen sulfonierter Phosphite und deren Einsatz als Cokatalysatoren in der rhodiumkatalysierten HydroformylierungAdvanced Synthesis & Catalysis, 1993
- Organometallchemie in hohen Oxidationsstufen, eine Herausforderung – das Beispiel RheniumAngewandte Chemie, 1988
- Selective modification of cytoplasmic membrane fluidity by catalytic hydrogenation provides evidence on its primary role in chilling susceptibility of the blue‐green alga, Anacystis nidulansFEBS Letters, 1985
- Modulation of membrane fluidity by catalytic hydrogenation affects the chilling susceptibility of the blue‐green alga, Anacystis nidulansFEBS Letters, 1983
- Studies on the catalytic hydrogenation of biomembranes Hydrogenation of phosphatidylcholine liposomes by two water-soluble rhodium-phosphine catalystsBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Lipids and Lipid Metabolism, 1982
- Coordinating behaviour of diphenylphosphineacetic acidJournal of Inorganic and Nuclear Chemistry, 1976
- Formation and catalytic properties of water-soluble phosphine complexesReaction Kinetics and Catalysis Letters, 1975
- Umsetzung von Alkalimetallphosphiden mit Salzen aromatischer Sulfonsäuren 2. Mitt.: Die Reaktion substituierter aromatischer Sulfonate mit KaliumdiphenylphosphidMonatshefte für Chemie / Chemical Monthly, 1965
- Alkali‐Phosphorverbindungen und ihr reaktives Verhalten, V. Darstellung von Carboxyphosphinen R2P‐[CH2]n‐CO2HEuropean Journal of Inorganic Chemistry, 1960