General and selective deoxygenation by hydrogen using a reusable earth-abundant metal catalyst

Chemoselective deoxygenation by hydrogen is particularly challenging but crucial for an efficient late-stage modification of functionality-laden fine chemicals, natural products, or pharmaceuticals and the economic upgrading of biomass-derived molecules into fuels and chemicals. We report here on a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inScience advances Vol. 5; no. 11; p. eaav3680
Main Authors Schwob, T, Kunnas, P, de Jonge, N, Papp, C, Steinrück, H-P, Kempe, R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Association for the Advancement of Science 01.11.2019
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Summary:Chemoselective deoxygenation by hydrogen is particularly challenging but crucial for an efficient late-stage modification of functionality-laden fine chemicals, natural products, or pharmaceuticals and the economic upgrading of biomass-derived molecules into fuels and chemicals. We report here on a reusable earth-abundant metal catalyst that permits highly chemoselective deoxygenation using inexpensive hydrogen gas. Primary, secondary, and tertiary alcohols as well as alkyl and aryl ketones and aldehydes can be selectively deoxygenated, even when part of complex natural products, pharmaceuticals, or biomass-derived platform molecules. The catalyst tolerates many functional groups including hydrogenation-sensitive examples. It is efficient, easy to handle, and conveniently synthesized from a specific bimetallic coordination compound and commercially available charcoal. Selective, sustainable, and cost-efficient deoxygenation under industrially viable conditions seems feasible.
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ISSN:2375-2548
2375-2548
DOI:10.1126/sciadv.aav3680