A recyclable catalyst that precipitates at the end of the reaction
- 1 July 2003
- journal article
- letter
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 424 (6948) , 530-532
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nature01856
Abstract
Homogeneous catalysts—which exist in the same (usually liquid) phase as reactants and products—are usually more selective than heterogeneous catalysts and far less affected by limitations due to slow transport of reactants and products, but their separation from reaction products can be costly and inefficient. This has stimulated the development of strategies that facilitate the recycling of homogeneous catalysts1,2,3,4. Some of these methods exploit the preference of a catalyst for one of two solvents with thermoregulated miscibility5,6; others exploit a dramatic decrease in catalyst solubility as one reagent is consumed7,8 or temperature changed after completion of the reaction9,10,11,12,13,14. Here we describe a tungsten catalyst for the solvent-free hydrosilylation of ketones that retains its activity until essentially all of the liquid substrate is converted to liquid products, which we can then simply decant to separate the catalyst that precipitates from the products of the reaction. We attribute the ability of the catalyst to retain its solubility and hence activity until completion of the reaction to the transient formation of liquid clathrate15,16 that contains a few molecules of the substrate per molecule of the otherwise solid catalyst. Insights into the fundamental processes controlling the formation of this liquid clathrate might help to tailor other catalysts and substrates, so as to develop efficient and solvent-free schemes for reactions of practical interest.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fluorous Catalysis under Homogeneous Conditions without Fluorous Solvents: A “Greener” Catalyst Recycling Protocol Based upon Temperature-Dependent Solubilities and Liquid/Solid Phase SeparationJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2003
- Homogeneous Catalysis--New Approaches to Catalyst Separation, Recovery, and RecyclingScience, 2003
- Liquid clathrate formation in ionic liquid–aromatic mixturesElectronic supplementary information (ESI) available: crystallographic information, CCDC 200588–200590. See http://www.rsc.org/suppdata/cc/b2/b212726a/ for crystallographic files in CIF or other electronic format.Chemical Communications, 2003
- A Fluorous Super Brønsted Acid Catalyst: Application to Fluorous Catalysis without Fluorous SolventsSynlett, 2002
- The Catalysis of the Ruff Oxidative Degradation of Aldonic Acids by Copper(II)-Containing SolidsJournal of Catalysis, 2002
- Catalytic ionic hydrogenations of ketones using molybdenum and tungsten complexesBased on the presentation given at Dalton Discussion No. 4, 10–13th January 2002, Kloster Banz, Germany.J. Chem. Soc., Dalton Trans., 2002
- Homogeneous Catalysis with Inexpensive Metals: Ionic Hydrogenation of Ketones with Molybdenum and Tungsten CatalystsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2000
- The Allyl Leaving Group Approach to Tricoordinate Silyl, Germyl, and Stannyl CationsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1999
- Fluorous Biphase ChemistryAccounts of Chemical Research, 1998
- The Hydrosilylation ReactionPublished by Wiley ,1989