| Literature DB >> 27254667 |
Daniele Masseroni1, Simone Mosca2,3, Matthew P Mower3, Donna G Blackmond4, Julius Rebek5,6.
Abstract
The majority of reactions currently performed in the chemical industry take place in organic solvents, compounds that are generally derived from petrochemicals. To promote chemical processes in water, we examined the use of synthetic, deep water-soluble cavitands in the Staudinger reduction of long-chain aliphatic diazides (C8 , C10 , and C12 ). The diazide substrates are taken up by the cavitand in D2 O in folded, dynamic conformations. The reduction of one azide group to an amine gives a complex in which the substrate is fixed in an unsymmetrical conformation, with the amine terminal exposed and the azide terminal deep and inaccessible within the cavitand. Accordingly, the reduction of the second azide group is inhibited, even with excess phosphine, and good yields of the monofunctionalized products are obtained. In contrast, the reduction of the free diazides in bulk solution yields diamine products.Entities:
Keywords: Staudinger reduction; cavitands; diazides; selectivity; supramolecular chemistry
Year: 2016 PMID: 27254667 DOI: 10.1002/anie.201602355
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336