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    Multicomponent Reactions

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    Multicomponent Reactions appear to be ideal for any form of synthesis, because of their numerous advantages in terms of sustainability and selectivity in building up complex molecular architectures, with high molecular diversity. This Special Issue collects seven contributions which expand our knowledge about Multicomponent Reactions, providing a good overview about innovative reactivities and applications

    CARTA DELLE GEODIVERSITA’ IN AREE VULCANICHE ALLA SCALA 1:75.000 CON NOTE UILLUSTRATIVE

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    I vulcani sono sicuramente le manifestazioni più evidenti della dinamicità della terra. Il territorio su cui insistono può subire modifiche anche sostanziali in uno spazio temporale infinitesimo o in tempi più o meno lunghi. Ogni eruzione comporta l’immissione sulla superficie terrestre di volumi di materiali da poche decine di m3 fino a km3 con estensione dei depositi da ettari a centinaia di km2. Ogni immissione determina l’alterazione del profilo d’equilibrio dei corsi d’acqua innescando rapidi processi di erosione, trasporto e sedimentazione di materiale dalle aree topograficamente più rilevate a quelle più pianeggianti. Di conseguenza il paesaggio di un’area vulcanica attiva è soggetto a cambiamenti continui che possono essere più o meno significativi in funzione della litologia del materiale vulcanico eruttato. Ad esempio, una colata di lava o un dicco offre una maggiore resistenza ai processi di erosione rispetto ad un deposito di cenere non consolidato e quindi la morfologia relativa risulta spesso sollevata rispetto all’area circostante anche se le lave, al momento dell’eruzione, tendono a scorrere nelle depressioni topografiche (inversione del rilievo morfologico). La grande varietà di materiale eruttato dai vulcani, anche nel corso di una sola eruzione, determina una ampia varietà di morfologie che col tempo, quando il vulcano andrà in estinzione, tenderanno a caratterizzare l’area vulcanica stessa. La diversità dei materiali vulcanici condizionerà lo sviluppo di biodiversità animale e vegetale e determinerà anche un diverso adattamento dell’uomo all’ambiente con ripercussioni sulla tipologia e distribuzione degli insediamenti.La carta della geodiversità in aree vulcaniche ha come obiettivo proprio quello di evidenziare i diversi litotipi vulcanici che hanno contribuito in una certa area alla modellazione del paesaggio ed hanno determinato lo sviluppo delle attività dell’uomo in funzione delle loro caratteristiche e fruibilità. La morfologia del territorio ha, infatti, un’influenza decisiva sulla realtà insediativa e produttiva dell’uomo e sul sistema faunistico e floristic

    DEFORMAZIONI GRAVITATIVE PROFONDE IN AMBIENTE VULCANICO: ESEMPI IN VULCANI ITALIANI

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    Le aree vulcaniche sono soggette a deformazione verticale lenta o rapida dovuta ad una instabilità indotta da processi idrotermali o dalla risorgenza di corpi intrusivi in specifici settori dell’area vulcanica o di edifici vulcanici. Per di più le aree vulcaniche sono spesso interessate da sismicità sia a scala regionale che locale. L’instabilità degli edifici vulcanici si traduce spesso in collassi guidati dalla gravità di parti o dell’intero fianco dell’edificio vulcanico a cui si associano depositi di frana di volume considerevole. I processi di collasso si verificano quando l’edificio vulcanico raggiunge altezze considerevoli, rispetto al suo diametro di base, e l’accumulo dei materiali prodotti dalle eruzioni causa un sovraccarico di peso sia sull’edifico stesso che sul substrato su cui poggia l’edificio. Molti degli aspetti morfologici e strutturali che si sviluppano come conseguenza dell’instabilità di un vulcano sono simili a quelli osservati in ambiente sedimentario e generalmente classificati come DGPV (Deformazioni Gravitative Profonde di Versante). Le strutture più comunemente associate alla deformazione dell’edifico sono aperture del cratere o delle caldere a forma di ferro di cavallo a cui spesso sono associati depositi di colate detritiche di volume significativo. Molti vulcani italiani, sia attivi che spenti o quiescenti, mostrano crateri e caldere a forma di ferro di cavallo. Alcune di queste strutture sono ormai note e ben studiate, mentre altre, per lo più relative ai vulcani più antichi, sono ancora poco conosciute e in molti casi la loro origine è ancora dibattuta. In questo lavoro, dopo un breve excursus sulle strutture di deformazione più note dei vulcani attivi italiani, come quelle della Sciara del Fuoco di Stromboli, della Valle del Bove dell’Etna, del Vesuvio e di Ischia, vengono presentate alcune strutture deformative che mostrano aspetti comparabili con le DGPV dei vulcani spenti e sottomarini delle Isole Pontine, del vulcano di Roccamonfina e del vulcano di Panarea. Nelle Isole Pontine di Ponza e Zannone, le deformazioni gravitative si sviluppano lungo piani estensionali a basso angolo che, per gli aspetti morfologici e strutturali osservati, possono essere interpretati come dovuti a stress locale indotto dall’intrusione del magma che alimentava la crescita di domi acidi sottomarini. A Ponza, questi piani, lungo cui si realizzava lo scivolamento gravitativo di masse di ialoclastiti dai fianchi dei domi in accrescimento, possono essere dovuti alla necessità di creare un equilibrio tra la progressiva iniezione del magma nella ialoclstite già depositata e lo stress gravitazionale. A Zannone, la crescita di un criptodomo portò al basculamento delle unità del basamento sedimentario che iniziarono a slittare lungo i piani di stratificazione raggiungendo le attuali posizioni stratigrafiche anomale lungo piani a basso angolo. A Roccamonfina, nell’Italia meridionale, la presenza della struttura sommitale calderica aperta verso est a forma di ferro di cavallo può essere interpretata come dovuta all’instabilità del fianco orientale del vulcano, sviluppatosi in corrispondenza di un importante elemento strutturale a carattere regionale (faglia del Monte Massico). Gli aspetti morfologici e l’entità dei volumi coinvolti nel processo di scivolamento gravitativo, sono compatibili con quelli delle DGPV. Infine, a Panarea, nell’ arcipelago delle Isole Eolie, lungo la falesia occidentale dell’isola, è visibile il nucleo interno del domo lavico. L’esposizione del cuore del domo suggerisce che il vulcano sia stato soggetto a una o più fasi di collasso del fianco occidentale. L’analisi dettagliata della falesia ha evidenziato molti aspetti morfologici generalmente associati alle deformazioni gravitative profonde di versante (DGPV) ed in particolare a quelle definite sackungsVolcanic areas are characterized by slow and rapid vertical ground deformations due to deep thermal instabilities or the resurgence of magma bodies in delimited sectors of a volcanic edifice. Moreover volcanic areas are often the loci of both tectonic and volcanic seismicity. For these reasons, in active or quiescent volcanoes, slope instability is common and may occur as sector or flank collapses gravitationally controlled, involving large rock volumes. Volcanoes experience this type of failure when they reach high relief and oversteepening in a relatively rapid period of activity. Many morphological and structural features affecting unstable volcanic edifices subjected to instability are similar to those described as associated to DGSD (Deep-Seated Gravitational Deformation). The most common features include horseshoe-shaped craters or calderas and associated large debris avalanche deposits. Most of the Italian volcanoes, active, quiescent or dormant, show distinctive horseshoe-shaped craters opened at one end. Some of them are well known and studied features, some others have received less attention due to their state of preservation. For most cases of both categories triggers and favourable factors are still debated. This paper presents case studies of slope deformations that may potentially be classified as DGSD affecting different types of volcanoes and volcanic islands in Italy

    Relatively rapid emplacement of dome-forming magma inferred from strain analyses: the case of the acid Latian dome complexes (Central Italy)

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    We have analysed the relationship between the volcanic substratum and magma body emplacement for the acid dome complexes of Latium, Central Italy. Our study shows that the volcanic edifices, which are mainly Pleistocene cryptodomes and related explosive products, were derived from mantle magmas contaminated by crustal materials. The Cimini, Tolfa and Cerite-Manziate dome complexes of Latium show the following characteristics: a shallow laccolith origin; emplacement in basins that have identical tectonic evolution and geological structure; the same magmatic composition and density contrast between magma and host rock; and geochronological data that are inconsistent with field evidence. In the Cimini and Tolfa dome complexes, the deformation induced by shallow intrusions was accompanied by ∼200 m uplift of the sedimentary cover. The estimated pluton infilling time for the Cimini and Tolfa domes is 102 years while the strain rate required to uplift their Pliocene overburden by 200 m is ε'm∼ 10-9 s-1. The rapid evolution of the dome complexes is consistent with field data that show no relevant interruptions in the volcanic activity and no significant compositional changes in the volcanic products related to the extrusion of the domes. For the Cerite-Manziate dome complex, the minimal input rate of magma favoured a monogenetic style of volcanism, independent of the regional stress condition

    Structural evolution of the Pleistocene Cimini trachytic volcanic complex (Central Italy)

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    Structural, geomorphological, geophysical and volcanological data have been processed for the implementation of a dedicated GIS through which the structural evolution of the Pleistocene trachytic Cimini volcano (central Italy) has been reconstructed. The evolution of the Cimini complex includes three main close-in time phases: (1) intrusion of a shallow laccolith, rising along NW and NE trending faults and stagnating at the contact between the Mesozoic-Cenozoic and the Pliocene-Pleistocene sedimentary units constituting the bedrock of the volcano; (2) emplacement of lava domes along radial and tangential fractures formed by the swelling induced by the laccolith growth; (3) ignimbrite eruptions and final effusion of olivine-latitic lavas. Domes are both of Pelean and low lava dome type and their morphologywas controlled by the location on the inclined surface of the swelled area. Some domes show to have uplifted upper Pliocene thermally metamorphosed clay sediments, suggesting a cryptodome-like growth. Comparison of the top of the Mesozoic-Cenozoic units with the top of the upper Pliocene-Pleistocene sedimentary complex, suggests that the laccolith emplaced in a graben of the Mesozoic-Cenozoic sedimentary complex filled by the Pliocene–Pleistocene sediments uplifted by the shallow intrusion. Stress patterns acting on the Cimini area have been deduced analysing the drainage network and the morphotectonic lineaments. Rose diagrams show a large dispersion of the lineaments reflecting the local presence of radial and tangential fractures. The most frequent extensional NW and NE trending lineaments have regional significance and controlled th

    Evoluzione pleistocenica del margine tirrenico dell'Italia centrale tra eustatismo, vulcanismo e tettonica

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    Viene presentata una sintesi dei dati ottenuti durante la realizzazione dei fogli geologici alla scala 1:50.000 riguardanti alcune aree costiere del Lazio. La possibilità di porre a confronto l’evoluzione di settori che presentano problematiche simili ma con situazioni locali specifiche ha permesso di evidenziare, a partire da circa 850 ka, una storia comune per la costa del Lazio settentrionale e centrale, diversa da quella che ha invece interessato nello stesso intervallo di tempo la costa del Lazio meridionale. La ricostruzione degli eventi a scala regionale ha permesso di distinguere gli effetti di una tettonica regionale (soprattutto di sollevamento isostatico lungo la costa del Lazio settentrionale e centrale e di subsidenza per quello meridionale) rispetto a movimenti locali che potrebbero essere essenzialmente legati alle fasi vulcaniche che hanno contemporaneamente interessato il margine tirrenico del Lazio. Vengono inoltre evidenziate alcune problematiche che riguardano l’organizzazione cartografica nazionale ed in particolare la denominazione dei sintemi a scala regionale e la necessità di introdurre una nomenclatura in grado di associare nel suo interno più sintemi non distinguibili sul terreno.We present a synthesis of the data collected during the field work devoted to the realization of the geological map at the 1:50.000 of Italy, concerning some coastal areas of Latium. The possibility to compare the evolution of areas envolved in the same geodinamic contest but having different local structural framework, has allowed us to evidence a common history, starting from 850 ka, for the coast of northern and central Latium , different from that of the southern coast. The effect of local estensional tectonic related to the volcanism which interested central Italy in that period was distinguished. The units have been organized in Unconformity Bounded Stratigraphic Units (UBSU) on the base of the hierarchy order of the basal surfaces delimithing them. Synthemes have been limited by surfaces recognized at regional scale caused by oscillation of the sea level. Each surface has been dated on the base of the geochronological data and /or the faunistic content of the above sediments and then it has been correlated to an isotopic stage. The vulcanic units have been organized following the indication of Fisher and Schmincke (1984), by introducing the Eruption units. “An eruption unit is a deposit defined as a thickness of volcanic material deposited from an eruptive pulse, an eruptive phase or an eruption...it is a conceptual entity that relates volcanic activity and a rock stratigraphic unit”. This method allows to consider all the unconformities recognizable in volcanic areas which cannot be extended at regional scale but are important to reconstruct the main phases of the volcano evolution. It allows even to consider the volcanic evolution in its regional contest. The volcanic deposits originated by the reworking of the primary units have been distinguished in syn-eruption and inter-eruption units (Smith, 1991; De Rita et alii, 2002 b; Giordano et alii, 2002 a). The geological and structural evolution of the island of Ponza, Zannone and Palmarola in the Pontine Archipelago, 30 km south east from the central coast of Latium, has been reconstructed. These three islands are the remnants of a submarine dome complex developed from the Upper Pliocene to almost 1.1 Ma. Three main ryolithic domes have been recognized in Ponza, developed along NE-trending lineaments and showing different hyaloclastic facies reflecting the different geological contest in which they developed. The norhernmost Piana d’Incenso dome shows a prevailing hyaloclastic facies made of clast supported breccias and by flow banded lavas produced by its intrusive mode of emplacement, as a cryptodome. Similar facies characterize the Zannone dome in the Zannone island, where the intrusive nature is demonstrated by the structural relationship between the flow-banded lavas and the sedimentary units: these are tilted and deformed along low angle normal faults at the contact with the vulcanites. We have interpreted that the domes emplaced as cryptodome, because they were intruded almost at the center of a structural high of the sedimentary substratum made of the Mesozoic- Cenozoic brittle rocks. The other domes of Ponza and Palmarola show different hyaloclastic facies, mainly made of thick hyaloclastites showing different degree of brecciation reflecting the different degree of magma-water interaction. We suggest that the extrusive mode of emplacement of these domes is because their emplacement was along regional extensional faults controlling the structural evolution of the continental platform on which the volcanic dome complex developed. In the southern part of Ponza a subaerial trachytic dome developed almost 1.1 Ma, after that the rhyolitic volcanism ended. The geological gap between the rhyolitic and the trachytic phases of volcanism, is evidenced by a high relief erosive surface. On the three island, in the range between 80 and 110 m a.s.l., marine terraces are present. These terraces have been correlated on the base of their similar morphology and because the above sediments are lithologically similar. They have to be formed after the end of the volcanism in the three islands. The uplifting of the surface occurred probably during a contemporaneous relative low standing of the sea level. We suggest to relate this event with the uplifting of the central coast of Latium, that occurred between 0.9 and 0.8 Ma, during the isotopic stage 22, when the alkali-potasssic volcanism started. The difference of the altitude at which the surface presently lies, is probably due to the effect of local extensional tectonic. Along the northern and the central coast of Latium, we have recognized three orders of terraces which coincide in the altitude and the age. In the northern coast the presence of a small basin infilled by volcaniclastic sediments, was helpful in correlating stratigraphic succession of the Vulsini, Sabatini and Vico volcanic districts to the coastal area successions. Here, the UBSU have been organized in 5 Synthemes whose basal surfaces were produced during low standing of the sea level. On the base of geochronological data and /or the faunistic content of the above sediments, the last three synthems have been ascribed to the 9,7 and 5 isotopic stages respectively (De Rita et alii 2002 b). In the central coast of Italy, in the area of Roma city, the UBSU have been organized in 7 synthemes (Giordano et alii 2003), the last three of which have the same altitude and age of those recognized along the northern coast. Along the southern coast no terraces can be recognized. It has been then possible to establish that the coast of central Italy was subjected to a regional uplift evaluated in the order of 0,2 mm/y, whereas the southern coast was subjected to a continuous subsidence active from Pliocene. Local extensional tectonic related to the volcanism has been recognized in the roman area. Some problems related to the organization of the national cartography are evidenced. They concern the nomenclature of synthem at regional scale and the opportunity to introduce a specific hierarchy to indicate an association of synthemes. In fact, in some cases it has not been possible to recognize all the discontinuities related to sea level oscillations, precluding the possibility to distinguish single synthemes that have been unified together. They do not represent a supersynthem because unconformities of major hierachic order were not recognize

    Efficient Lewis Acid Systems for the A3 Coupling reaction

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    Efficient Lewis Acid Systems for the A3 Coupling reaction Cimarelli C., a Navazio F.,a Rossi F. V.a, Del Bello F., Marcantoni E.a aSchool of Science and Technology, Chemistry Division, University of Camerino, Via S. Agostino 1, 62032 Camerino; e-mail: [email protected] Propargylamines are an attractive class of molecules because of their particular molecular skeleton, that contains an amine group located in β-position to an alkyne moiety suitable for many chemical transformations. In recent years they received a growing interest as key intermediates for several biologically active compound, natural products and also different heterocycles.[1,2] Our goal was the development of green and simple methodologies for the synthesis of secondary propargylamines by Lewis acid catalyzed or promoted A3 reaction among aldehydes, alkynes and primary amines, that are in general less applied in such reactions because of their lower reactivity. In particular, we studied two different pathway: the CuSO4/NaI system in one pot fashion and the CeCl3/CuI system in one pot/two steps way (Scheme 1). Scheme 1. CeCl3·7H2O/CuI and CuSO4/NaI catalyzed A3 reaction. Heptahydrated CeCl3 is reported to be an excellent catalyst for many useful organic transformation as the synthesis of imines. Its efficacy as Lewis acid is enhanced in the presence of inorganic iodides/iodide salt and being cooper the transition metal of choice for A3 reactions, CuI was used.[3] Also the CuSO4/NaI couple has revealed to be an interesting Lewis acid system as an alternative to CeCl3/CuI system which allow the formation of CuI in situ by quantitative spontaneous reaction that takes place in few seconds.[4] Typically CuSO4/NaI catalysed reactions are faster than CeCl3·7H2O/CuI reactions, but suffer of some disadvantages, such as lower yields, and a narrower applicability. Both reaction conditions have been applied to different aldehydes (aromatic and aliphatic) and to chiral starting materials, the amine in general has no effect on the reaction outcome. The relevant Glaser coupling drawback observed in the CuSO4/NaI system conditions has been suppressed by adding some benzoic acid, and has not been observed with the CeCl3/CuI system. References: 1) Lauder, K.; Toscani, A.; Scalacci, N.; Castagnolo, D. Chem. Rev. 2017, 117, 14091. 2) Peshkov, V. A.; Pereshivko, O. P.; Van der Eycken, E. V. Chem. Soc. Rev. 2012, 41, 3790. 3) G. Bartoli, E. Marcantoni, M. Marcolini, L. Sambri, Chem. Rev. 2010, 110, 6104. 4) Bailey, A. D.; Cherney, S. M.; Anzalone, P. W.; Anderson, E. D.; Ernat, J. J.; Mohan, R. S. Synlett 2006, 215

    Deep explosive focal depths during maar forming magmatichydrothermal eruption: Baccano Crater, Central Italy

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    Abstract We describe the eruptive activity of the Pleistocene composite Baccano maar crater in the Sabatini Volcanic Complex (Central Italy) combining stratigraphy, grain size/componentry and rare earth element and Yttrium (REY) composition of its eruptive products with the stratigraphy and geothermal data derived from deep wells drilled on the Baccano structural high. The main lithological characteristics of the basal Baccano maar pyroclastic deposit, composed of more than 60% wt of non-thermometamorphosed lithic clasts from the sedimentary basement, show that the first eruption was magmatic-hydrothermal in nature. The lithology of the sedimentary lithic clasts indicates that the fragmentation level was at a depth of −1,000 to −1,200 m, with fragment depth verified by deep well stratigraphy. The 15% wt juvenile non-vesicular glass components suggest that magma played a minor role in powering the eruption. Assuming that the high-salinity hot hydrothermal fluids (365<T<410°C and P∼25 MPa), hosted in the highly permeable and confined aquifer below the Baccano maar are representative of those at the time of the eruption, we propose that hydrofracturing would have triggered the eruption caused by overpressure at the top of the geothermal aquifer. REY analysis performed on pyroclastic fragments and basement rocks suggest that partial dissolution of the deeper limestones (>−1,400 m) by the aggressive hydrothermal fluids enriched in acid components (HF, HCl, and H2SO4) may have contributed to increased CO2 partial pressure that helped to drive the hydrofracturing. This could have caused rapid vapour separation and pressure drop, allowing the almost simultaneous breaking of the aquifer cover and brecciation of the calcareous units down to −1,000 to −1,200 m depth. The relative abundance of calcareous lithics in the basal part of the first Baccano eruptive unit, representing about the upper 200 m of stratigraphy below the top of the Baccano structural high, reveals the descent of the piezometric surface during the eruption. Combining deep well information and maar product stratigraphy, using also REY data from maar pyroclastic fragments and the basement rocks we draw an interpretative model for the Baccano maarforming eruption, concluding that a) magmatic-hydrothermal eruptions may originate deeper than previously thought, and b) hydrothermal fluids circulating in limestone aquifers m

    CeCl3·7H2O/NaI as Lewis acid catalyst in the Povarov reaction for the synthesis of functionalized tetrahydroquinolines

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    Many different biologically active compounds contain the widespread scaffold of tetrahydroquinolines. Hence the interest toward their synthesis has stimulated the development of several synthetic strategies, among which the Povarov reaction is one of the most applied. The performance of this three-components imino Diels-Alder reaction can be improved by Lewis acid catalysis. In the last years the search for more economic and environmentally benign synthetic methodologies has stimulated the use of nontoxic and nonexpensive catalytic systems, and in this perspective Cerium trichloride has became interesting because of its low toxicity and cost and for the ease of application also in non anhydrous conditions.2,3 Here we describe the study of the CeCl3·7H2O/NaI system as Lewis acid catalyst in the Povarov reaction for the synthesis of substituted tetrahydroquinolines. The reaction proceeds well, in acceptable reaction times and up to 86% yield. Both syn and anti diastereomers of the final tetrahydroquinoline can be obtained preferentially, depending on the reaction conditions, because the stereoselectivity is opposite in acetonitrile or in solventless conditions. Also substituted anilines and aromatic aldehydes have been employed with good results. A further investigation was made about the mechanism, to understand the formation of the main byproducts
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