Disentangling the Effect of Pressure and Mixing on a Mechanochemical Bromination Reaction by Solid‐state NMR Spectroscopy
Ettore Bartalucci
1
,
Leeroy Hendrickx
3
,
Francesco Puccetti
2
,
Igor Danciães Almeida Silva
1
,
Rıza Dervişoğlu
1
,
Rakesh Puttreddy
2, 4
,
Carsten Bolm
2
,
Thomas Wiegand
1, 3
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2023-01-20
scimago Q1
wos Q2
SJR: 0.981
CiteScore: 6.7
Impact factor: 3.7
ISSN: 09476539, 15213765
PubMed ID:
36445819
General Chemistry
Catalysis
Organic Chemistry
Abstract
Mechanical forces, including compressive stresses, have a significant impact on chemical reactions. Besides the preparative opportunities, mechanochemical conditions benefit from the absence of any organic solvent, the possibility of a significant synthetic acceleration and unique reaction pathways. Together with an accurate characterization of ball-milling products, the development of a deeper mechanistic understanding of the occurring transformations at a molecular level is critical for fully grasping the potential of organic mechanosynthesis. We herein studied a bromination of a cyclic sulfoximine in a mixer mill and used solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy for structural characterization of the reaction products. Magic-angle spinning (MAS) was applied for elucidating the product mixtures taken from the milling jar without introducing any further post-processing on the sample. Ex-situ 13C-detected NMR spectra of ball-milling products showed the formation of a rather crystalline solid phase with the regioselective bromination of the S-aryl group of the heterocycle in position 4. Completion is reached in less than 30 minutes as deduced from the NMR spectra. The bromination can also be achieved by magnetic stirring, but then, a longer reaction time is required. Mixing the solid educts in the NMR rotor allows to get in-situ insights into the reaction and enables the detection of a reaction intermediate. The pressure alone induced in the rotor by MAS is not sufficient to lead to full conversion and the reaction occurs on slower time scales than in the ball mill, which is crucial for analysing mixtures taken from the milling jar by solid-state NMR. Our data suggest that on top of centrifugal forces, an efficient mixing of the starting materials is required for reaching a complete reaction.
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21
Total citations:
21
Citations from 2024:
15
(71.43%)
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GOST
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Bartalucci E. et al. Disentangling the Effect of Pressure and Mixing on a Mechanochemical Bromination Reaction by Solid‐state NMR Spectroscopy // Chemistry - A European Journal. 2023. Vol. 29. No. 12.
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Bartalucci E., Schumacher C., Hendrickx L., Puccetti F., Danciães Almeida Silva I., Dervişoğlu R., Puttreddy R., Bolm C., Wiegand T. Disentangling the Effect of Pressure and Mixing on a Mechanochemical Bromination Reaction by Solid‐state NMR Spectroscopy // Chemistry - A European Journal. 2023. Vol. 29. No. 12.
Cite this
RIS
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TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1002/chem.202203466
UR - https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.202203466
TI - Disentangling the Effect of Pressure and Mixing on a Mechanochemical Bromination Reaction by Solid‐state NMR Spectroscopy
T2 - Chemistry - A European Journal
AU - Bartalucci, Ettore
AU - Schumacher, Christian
AU - Hendrickx, Leeroy
AU - Puccetti, Francesco
AU - Danciães Almeida Silva, Igor
AU - Dervişoğlu, Rıza
AU - Puttreddy, Rakesh
AU - Bolm, Carsten
AU - Wiegand, Thomas
PY - 2023
DA - 2023/01/20
PB - Wiley
IS - 12
VL - 29
PMID - 36445819
SN - 0947-6539
SN - 1521-3765
ER -
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BibTex (up to 50 authors)
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@article{2023_Bartalucci,
author = {Ettore Bartalucci and Christian Schumacher and Leeroy Hendrickx and Francesco Puccetti and Igor Danciães Almeida Silva and Rıza Dervişoğlu and Rakesh Puttreddy and Carsten Bolm and Thomas Wiegand},
title = {Disentangling the Effect of Pressure and Mixing on a Mechanochemical Bromination Reaction by Solid‐state NMR Spectroscopy},
journal = {Chemistry - A European Journal},
year = {2023},
volume = {29},
publisher = {Wiley},
month = {jan},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.202203466},
number = {12},
doi = {10.1002/chem.202203466}
}
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