Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
Generation, regeneration, and recovery of Cu catalytic system by changing the polarity of electrodes. / Родыгин, Константин Сергеевич; Самойленко, Дмитрий Евгеньевич; Сеиткалиева, Марина; Лоцман, Кристина Александровна; Метляева, Светлана Алексеевна; Анаников, Валентин Павлович.
в: Green Chemistry, Том 24, № 3, 07.02.2022, стр. 1132-1140.Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Generation, regeneration, and recovery of Cu catalytic system by changing the polarity of electrodes
AU - Родыгин, Константин Сергеевич
AU - Самойленко, Дмитрий Евгеньевич
AU - Сеиткалиева, Марина
AU - Лоцман, Кристина Александровна
AU - Метляева, Светлана Алексеевна
AU - Анаников, Валентин Павлович
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © The Royal Society of Chemistry.
PY - 2022/2/7
Y1 - 2022/2/7
N2 - Considering a complete life cycle of metal catalysts, metals are usually mined from ores as salts (MX′n), industrially processed to the bulk metal (M) and then converted into the salts again (MXn) to be used as catalyst precursors. Under catalytic conditions, metal salts undergo transformations to form catalytically active species (MLn), and the anion (X) is typically converted to waste. Thus, there are extra steps before a catalytic process may start, and the chemical transformation involved therein generates considerable amounts of waste. Here, we study the strategy for merging electrodissolution with catalysis to skip these extra steps and demonstrate efficient waste-minimized transformations to access Cu catalysts from the metal. Bulk metal from an electrode can be transformed directly into a catalytic reaction under the action of electric current. As a representative example, dipolar addition of azides to alkynes was successfully catalyzed by copper metal. The reaction was carried out in an ionic liquid (IL), which acted simultaneously as an electrolyte, a solvent and stabilizer of the formed catalytically active species. The used catalyst can be regenerated (or reactivated, if necessary) by application of reverse polarity of electrodes and directly reused again. For metal and solvent recovery, the ILs used were easily separated from copper species by passing an electric current. The applicability of the copper-catalyzed transformation was additionally tested for cross-coupling of thiols with aryl halides (the Ullmann reaction), click reaction with calcium carbide and three-component azide–halide–alkyne coupling. The mechanism of copper dissolution from an electrode was studied, and the intermediates were identified by means of XRD, X-ray and HRESI-MS.
AB - Considering a complete life cycle of metal catalysts, metals are usually mined from ores as salts (MX′n), industrially processed to the bulk metal (M) and then converted into the salts again (MXn) to be used as catalyst precursors. Under catalytic conditions, metal salts undergo transformations to form catalytically active species (MLn), and the anion (X) is typically converted to waste. Thus, there are extra steps before a catalytic process may start, and the chemical transformation involved therein generates considerable amounts of waste. Here, we study the strategy for merging electrodissolution with catalysis to skip these extra steps and demonstrate efficient waste-minimized transformations to access Cu catalysts from the metal. Bulk metal from an electrode can be transformed directly into a catalytic reaction under the action of electric current. As a representative example, dipolar addition of azides to alkynes was successfully catalyzed by copper metal. The reaction was carried out in an ionic liquid (IL), which acted simultaneously as an electrolyte, a solvent and stabilizer of the formed catalytically active species. The used catalyst can be regenerated (or reactivated, if necessary) by application of reverse polarity of electrodes and directly reused again. For metal and solvent recovery, the ILs used were easily separated from copper species by passing an electric current. The applicability of the copper-catalyzed transformation was additionally tested for cross-coupling of thiols with aryl halides (the Ullmann reaction), click reaction with calcium carbide and three-component azide–halide–alkyne coupling. The mechanism of copper dissolution from an electrode was studied, and the intermediates were identified by means of XRD, X-ray and HRESI-MS.
KW - BOND FORMATION
KW - CALCIUM CARBIDE
KW - CHEMISTRY
KW - CLICK REACTION
KW - COPPER
KW - COUPLING REACTIONS
KW - ELECTROCHEMICAL SYNTHESIS
KW - IONIC LIQUIDS
KW - METAL
KW - NHC LIGANDS
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85124517595&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/1b73a97d-3a72-3533-b010-8c9e4565f991/
U2 - 10.1039/d1gc03975j
DO - 10.1039/d1gc03975j
M3 - Article
VL - 24
SP - 1132
EP - 1140
JO - Green Chemistry
JF - Green Chemistry
SN - 1463-9262
IS - 3
ER -
ID: 91886694