Journal of the American Chemical Society, volume 128, issue 40, pages 13261-13267

A New Concept for the Noncovalent Binding of a Ruthenium-Based Olefin Metathesis Catalyst to Polymeric Phases:  Preparation of a Catalyst on Raschig Rings

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2006-09-15
scimago Q1
SJR5.489
CiteScore24.4
Impact factor14.4
ISSN00027863, 15205126
PubMed ID:  17017807
General Chemistry
Catalysis
Biochemistry
Colloid and Surface Chemistry
Abstract
A new concept for noncovalent immobilization of a ruthenium olefin metathesis catalyst is presented. The 2-isopropoxybenzylidene ligand of a Hoveyda-Grubbs carbene is further modified by an additional amino group (7) and immobilization is achieved by treatment with sulfonated polystyrene forming the corresponding ammonium salt. In this novel strategy for the immobilization of ruthenium-based metathesis catalysts, the amino group plays a two-fold role, being first an active anchor for immobilization and second, after protonation, activating the catalysts (electron donating to electron withdrawing activity switch). The polymeric support was prepared by precipitation polymerization which led to small bead sizes (0.2-2 microm) and large surface areas. Compared to commercial resins this tailor-made phase showed superior properties in immobilization of complex 7. This concept of immobilization was applied to glass-polymer composite megaporous Raschig rings. Ru catalyst 7 on Raschig rings was used under batch conditions in various metathesis reactions, including ring-closing (RCM), cross- (CM) and enyne metathesis, to give products of high chemical purity with very low ruthenium contamination levels (21-102 ppm). The same ring can be used for up to 6 cycles of metathesis.
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