100,461 research outputs found

    SYNTHESIS, CHARACTERIZATION AND CATALYTIC ACTIVITY OF IRON, RUTHENIUM AND COBALT PORPHYRIN COMPLEXES

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    The insertion of a nitrene “RN” functionality into a C-H bond represents a valuable tool achieving a wide variety of nitrogen-containing fine chemicals, which frequently present pharmaceutical and/or biological properties. The key point to perform sustainable amination reactions are: i) The selection of a selective, active and stable catalytic system ii) The use of nitrene sources presenting high reactivity and atom efficiency. The last characteristic is well exhibited by organic azides (RN3)1 which transfer a nitrene functionality to an organic skeleton by yielding eco-friendly N2 as the only stoichiometric by-product. The reaction of RN3 with organic compounds can be thermally or photochemically promoted2 but, to improve the reaction selectivity, the presence of a metal catalyst is required. Amongst the catalysts used to achieve these chemical transformations,3, 4 metal porphyrins show a good catalytic efficiency coupled with a very high chemical stability.5 In the last decade, in our research group, we have studied the efficiency of cobalt6, 7 and ruthenium8 porphyrin complexes in catalysing the amination of a wide class of substrates by using ayl azides as nitrene sources. In this research project we have in-depth investigated the behavior of these catalysts in allylic9, inter10- and intra11 benzilic aminations. First, we have explored the catalytic activity of Ru(TPP)CO (TPP = dianion of tetraphenylporphyrin) in intermolecular benzylic amination reactions10, several benzylic substrates were reacted with different aryl azides employing the hydrocarbon as the reaction solvent and the catalytic ratio Ru(TPP)CO/azide = 4:50. It was observed that Ru(TPP)CO was also active in the amination of benzylic substrates containing an endocyclic benzylic C-H bond. The corresponding amines have been isolated in good yields. To investigate the mechanism of the benzylic amination catalyzed by Ru(TPP)CO, a kinetic study was undertaken. The analysis of kinetics and reaction selectivities indicated the formation of an active ruthenium (VI) imido complex as a catalytic intermediate. More in-depth studies will be necessary to better clarify the reaction mechanism of the amination of benzylic C-H bonds. Since Ru(TPP)CO has demonstrated to be a good catalyst in benzylic amination reactions we have subsequently studied the activity of this catalyst in allylic amination reactions9. Believing that an important step for the improvement of the catalytic efficiency of the reported methodology is the comprehension of the reaction mechanism, we first studied the catalyst reactivity towards the components of a model reaction, cyclohexene and azide. No catalyst modification was observed by 1H NMR when Ru(TPP)CO was suspended in cyclohexene and refluxed for a couple of hours, on the other hand, the reaction between Ru(TPP)CO and an 3,5(CF3)2C6H3N3 excess yielded the bis imido complex Ru(TPP)(NAr)2 which showed a catalytic activity similar or even better than that described for Ru(TPP)CO, his precursor. To assess if the formation of a bis-imido complex is a general reaction, we have also studied the reactivity of Ru(TPP)CO towards other aryl azides discovering that the nature of the active intermediate strongly depends on the electronic nature of the employed azide. We discovered the formation of another bis-imido complex in the reaction of Ru(TPP)CO with 4 CF3C6H4N3 but several experimental evidences indicate also the existence of a mono-imido ruthenium (IV) intermediate. This mono-imido complex can react with another molecule of aryl azide generating the bis-imido complex, or can form the complex Ru(TPP)(ArNH2)CO by hydrogen atom abstraction reactions. To shed some light into the Ru(TPP)CO catalysed allylic amination of cyclohexene, a kinetic study was undertaken employing two different arylazides as nitrogen source: 4 CF3C6H4N3 and 3,5-(CF3)2C6H4N3. In the first case the observed kinetics indicates the rate determine step of the reaction being the formation of the mono-imido complex that very quickly reacts with the olefin forming the allylic amine and regenerating Ru(TPP)CO. We suggest that Ru(TPP)CO is in equilibrium with the mono-amino complex for the presence of the aniline as reaction side-product. In the second case the kinetic was more complex than the previous discussed, in fact, the first order dependence was observed only for low concentrations of olefin. This behaviour indicates the coexistence of at least two mechanisms that contemporaneously occur with the prevalence of one or the other depending on the olefin concentration. The existence of two mechanisms was also supported by a DFT investigation.13 The theoretical study confirms that the first step of the cycle is the formation of a mono-imido complex RuIV(TPP)(NAr)(CO) which can undergo a singlettriplet interconversion to confer a diradical character to the “ArN” ligand. Hence, the activation of the allylic C-H bond of cyclohexene (C6H10) occurs through a C H•••N adduct detected as a Transition State. The formation of the desired allylic amine follows a “rebound” mechanism in which the nitrogen and carbon atoms radicals couple to yield the organic product. The release of the allylic amine restores the initial Ru(TPP)(CO) complex and allows the catalytic cycle to resume by the activation of another azide molecule. On the singlet PES, the CO ligand may be however dismissed from the mono-imido complex RuIV(TPP)(NAr)(CO)SN opening the way to an alternative catalytic cycle which also leads to allylic amine through comparable key steps. A second azide molecule occupies the freed coordination site of Ru(TPP)(NAr)SN to form the bis-imido complex Ru(TPP)(NAr)2, which is also prone to the intersystem crossing with the consequent C-H radical activation. The process continues till the azide reactant is present. The interconnected cycles have similarly high exergonic balances. The reaction scope of the benzylic amination has been then explored studying the intramolecular amination reaction of biphenyl azides containing benzylic C-H bonds.11 This reaction allows the synthesis of N heterocyclic compounds such as dihydrophenanthridines and phenanthridines. Phenanthridines are an important class of compounds from a biological point of view. They present a significant antitumor activity and are the basis of DNA-binding. Several challenges remain to be overcome to efficiently synthesise this class of molecules, in fact, whilst many methods to access five-membered rings are known, methodologies to yield six and seven-nitrogen membered rings in few steps remain rare. In this research project we have also studied the development of new synthetic methodologies to obtain new porphyrin frameworks and this part of my work has been developed in collaboration with Dr. Bernard Boitrel (University of Rennes, France). Some years ago we reported on the catalytic efficiency of chiral cobalt(II)-binaphthyl porphyrins in asymmetric cyclopropanations, and recorded positive data encouraging us to synthesise a structurally related chiral porphyrin. This new porphyrin has one C2 axis within the porphyrin plane and exhibits an open space on each side for substrate access and at the same time a steric chiral bulk surrounding the N-core. The reaction of the opprhyrin with FeBr2 afforded the FeIII(OMe) complex by the initial formation of the iron (II) porphyrin complex which was oxidised by the atmospheric oxygen in the presence of CH3OH yielding the desired complex in a quantitative yield. The catalytic activity of the iron complex was initially tested in the model reaction of α methylstyrene with ethyl diazoacetate (EDA). This new chiral iron porphyrin-based catalyst performed olefin stereoselective cyclopropanations with excellent yields (up to 99%), enantio- and diasteroselectivities (eetrans up to 87%, trans/cis ratios up to 99:1) and outstanding TON and TOF values (up to 20,000 and 120,000/h respectively). To the best of our knowledge, the outstanding values of TON and TOF (20,000 and 120,000/h respectively) have never been reported for metallo-porphyrin catalysed cyclopropanations and the robustness of the catalyst under an inert atmosphere allowed three catalytic recycles. Finally, high cyclopropane yields were obtained without using an olefin excess in accordance with the industrial request for sustainable processes, especially when expensive olefins are involved. Studies are ongoing to expand the reaction scope, including testing the cyclopropanation of several olefins by differently substituted diazo derivatives. References 1. S. Cenini, E. Gallo, A. Caselli, F. Ragaini, S. Fantauzzi and C. Piangiolino, Coord. Chem. Rev., 2006, 250, 1234-1253. 2. B. C. G. Soderberg, Curr. Org. Chem., 2000, 4, 727-764. 3. T. G. Driver, Org. Biomol. Chem., 2010, 8, 3831-3846. 4. S. Cenini, F. Ragaini, E. Gallo and A. Caselli, Curr. Org. Chem., 2011, 15, 1578-1592. 5. S. Fantauzzi, A. Caselli and E. Gallo, Dalton Trans., 2009, 5434-5443. 6. A. Caselli, E. Gallo, S. Fantauzzi, S. Morlacchi, F. Ragaini and S. Cenini, Eur. J. Inorg. Chem., 2008, 3009-3019. 7. P. Zardi, D. Intrieri, A. Caselli and E. Gallo, J. Organomet. Chem., 2012, 716, 269-274. 8. S. Fantauzzi, E. Gallo, A. Caselli, C. Piangiolino, F. Ragaini and S. Cenini, Eur. J. Org. Chem., 2007, 6053-6059. 9. D. Intrieri, A. Caselli, F. Ragaini, P. Macchi, N. Casati and E. Gallo, Eur. J. Inorg. Chem., 2012, 569-580. 10. D. Intrieri, A. Caselli, F. Ragaini, S. Cenini and E. Gallo, J. Porphyrins Phthalocyanines, 2010, 14, 732-740. 11. D. Intrieri, M. Mariani, A. Caselli, F. Ragaini and E. Gallo, Chem. Eur. J., 2012, 18, 10487-10490. 12. F. Ragaini, A. Penoni, E. Gallo, S. Tollari, C. L. Gotti, M. Lapadula, E. Mangioni and S. Cenini, Chem. Eur. J., 2003, 9, 249-259. 13. G. Manca, E. Gallo, D. Intrieri, C. Mealli; ACS, manuscript submitted 14. D. Intrieri, S. Le Gac, A. Caselli, E. Rose, B. Boitrel, E. Gallo; Chem.Commun.,manuscript submitted

    The Catalytic efficiency of Free-Base Porphyrins in promoting the N-Aryl oxazolidinones synthesis

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    Between other applications oxazolidinones are largely used as intermediates as well as chiral auxiliaries in organic synthesis1 and constitute a class of new antibacterial and antibiotics,2-7 the best pharmaceutical performances are usually observed for N-aryl oxazolidin-2-ones (NAOs), such as Linezolid,8 Tedizolid9 and Toloxatone,10 that are FDA-approved drugs. One of the most interesting methodologies for the synthesis of NAOs is the CO2 cycloaddition to aziridines in order to use this greenhouse gas as a renewable C1 synthetic building block. Recently, we have reported a ruthenium porphyrin-based catalytic procedure for synthesising N alkyl oxazolidin-2-ones11,12 and, during our efforts to extend the same procedure to the synthesis of NAOs, we discovered that this reaction was efficiently promoted by the very convenient TPPH2/TBACl catalytic system (TPPH2=tetraphenyl porphyrin; TBACl=tetrabutyl ammonium chloride). Here, we report the optimization and study scope of the synthesis of N aryl oxazolidin-2-ones, which were obtained either by reacting CO2 with purified N aryl aziridines or by applying a two-steps procedure. The latter methodology consists in the Ru(TPP)CO-catalysed synthesis of N-aryl aziridines that were converted into corresponding NAOs by the TPPH2/TBACl-catalysed cycloaddition of CO2. 1. Z. Vahideh and M. H. Majid, Current Organic Synthesis, 2018, 15, 3-20. 2. F. H. Malik Nasibullah, Naseem Ahmad, Abdul Rahman Khan, and Masihur Rahman, Adv. Sci. Eng. Med., 2015, 7, 91-111. 3. S. J. Pradeep, D. V. Maulikkumar, M. D. Tejas and K. C. Asit, Current Medicinal Chemistry, 2015, 22, 4379-4397. 4. A. Bhushan, N. J. Martucci, O. B. Usta and M. L. Yarmush, Expert Opinion on Drug Metabolism & Toxicology, 2016, 12, 475-477. 5. C. Roger, J. A. Roberts and L. Muller, Clinical Pharmacokinetics, 2018, 57, 559-575. 6. M. Nasibullah, F. Hassan, N. Ahmad, A. R. Khan and M. Rahman, Advanced Science, Engineering and Medicine, 2015, 7, 91-111. 7. K. Michalska, I. Karpiuk, M. Król and S. Tyski, Bioorg. Med. Chem., 2013, 21, 577-591. 8. A. Zahedi Bialvaei, M. Rahbar, M. Yousefi, M. Asgharzadeh and H. Samadi Kafil, J. Antimicrob. Chemother., 2017, 72, 354-364. 9. D. McBride, T. Krekel, K. Hsueh and M. J. Durkin, Expert Opinion on Drug Metabolism & Toxicology, 2017, 13, 331-337. 10. F. Moureau, J. Wouters, D. P. Vercauteren, S. Collin, G. Evrard, F. Durant, F. Ducrey, J. J. Koenig and F. X. Jarreau, European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 1992, 27, 939-948. 11. D. Carminati, E. Gallo, C. Damiano, A. Caselli and D. Intrieri, Eur. J. Inorg. Chem., 2018, 2018, 5258-5262. 12. D. Intrieri, C. Damiano, P. Sonzini and E. Gallo, J. Porphyrins Phthalocyanines, 2019, 23, 305-328

    Joint detection and classification of rockfalls in a microseismic monitoring network

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    A rockfall (RF) is a ubiquitous geohazard that is difficult to monitor or predict and poses a significant risk for people and transportation in several hilly and mountainous environments. The seismic signal generated by RF carries abundant physical and mechanical information. Thus, signals can be used by researchers to reconstruct the event location, onset time, volume and trajectory, and develop an efficient early warning system. Therefore, the precise automatic detection and classification of RF events are important objectives for scientists, especially in seismic monitoring arrays. An algorithm called DESTRO (DEtection and STorage of ROckfalls) aimed at combining seismic event automatic detection and classification was implemented ad hoc within the MATLAB environment. In event detection, the STA/LTA (short-time-average through long-time-average) method combined with other parameters, such as the minimum duration of an RF and the minimum interval time between two continuous seismic events is used. Furthermore, nine significant features based on the frequency, amplitude, seismic waveform, duration and multiple station attributes are newly proposed to classify seismic events in a RF environment. In particular, a three-step classification method is proposed for the discrimination of five different source types: RFs, earthquakes (EQs), tremors, multispike events (MSs) and subordinate MS events. Each component (vertical, east–west and north–south) at each station within the monitoring network is analysed, and a three-step classification is performed. At a given time, the event series detected from each component are integrated and reclassified component by component and station by station into a final event-type series as an output result. By this algorithm, a case study of the seven-month-long seismic monitoring of a former quarry in Central Italy was investigated by means of four triaxial velocimeters with continuous acquisition at a sampling rate of 200 Hz. During this monitoring period, a human-induced RF simulation was performed, releasing 95 blocks (in which 90 blocks validated) of different sizes from the benches of the quarry. Consequently, 64.9 per cent of EQs within 100 km were confirmed in a one-month monitoring period, 88 blocks in the RF simulation were classified correctly as RF events and 2 blocks were classified as MSs given their small energy. Finally, an ad hoc section of the algorithm was designed specifically for RF classification combined with EQ recognition. The algorithm could be applied in slope seismic monitoring to monitor the dynamic states of rock masses, as well as in slope instability forecasting and risk evaluation in EQ-prone areas
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