1,721,011 research outputs found

    A stoichiometric solvent-free protocol for acetylation reactions

    Full text link
    Considering the remarkable relevance of acetylated derivatives of phenols, alcohols, and aryl and alkyl thiols in different areas of biology, as well as in synthetic organic chemistry, a sustainable solvent-free approach to perform acetylation reactions is proposed here. Acetylation reactions are classically performed using excess of acetic anhydride (Ac2O) in solvent-free conditions or by eventually working with stoichiometric amounts of Ac2O in organic solvents; both methods require the addition of basic or acid catalysts to promote the esterification. Therefore, they usually lead to the generation of high amounts of wastes, which sensibly raise the E-factor of the process. With the aim to develop a more sustainable system, a solvent-free, stoichiometric acetylation protocol is, thus, proposed. The naturally occurring phenol, thymol, can be converted to the corresponding-biologically active-ester with good yields, in the presence of 1% of VOSO4. Interestingly, the process can be efficiently adopted to synthesize other thymyl esters, as well as to perform acetylation of alcohols and aryl and alkyl thiols. Remarkably, a further improvement has been achieved replacing Ac2O with its greener alternative, isopropenyl acetate (IPA)

    Tailored functionalization of natural phenols to improve biological activity

    Full text link
    Phenols are widespread in nature, being the major components of several plants and essential oils. Natural phenols' anti-microbial, anti-bacterial, anti-oxidant, pharmacological and nutritional properties are, nowadays, well established. Hence, given their peculiar biological role, numerous studies are currently ongoing to overcome their limitations, as well as to enhance their activity. In this review, the functionalization of selected natural phenols is critically examined, mainly highlighting their improved bioactivity after the proper chemical transformations. In particular, functionalization of the most abundant naturally occurring monophenols, diphenols, lipidic phenols, phenolic acids, polyphenols and curcumin derivatives is explored

    Towards the “Eldorado” of pKa Determination: A Reliable and Rapid DFT Model

    Full text link
    The selection of a “perfect tool” for the theoretical determination of acid-base dissociation constants (Ka) is still puzzling. Recently, we developed a user-friendly model exploiting CAM-B3LYP for determining pKa with impressive reliability. Herein, a new challenge is faced, examining a panel of functionals belonging to different rungs of the “Jacob’s ladder” organization, which classifies functionals according to their level of theory. Specifically, meta-generalized gradient approximations (GGAs), hybrid-GGAs, and the more complex range-separated hybrid (RSH)-GGAs were investigated in predicting the pKa of differently substituted carboxylic acids. Therefore, CAM-B3LYP, WB97XD, B3PW91, PBE1PBE, PBEPBE and TPSSTPSS were used, with 6-311G+(d,p) as the basis set and the solvation model based on density (SMD). CAM-B3LYP showed the lowest mean absolute error value (MAE = 0.23) with relatively high processing time. PBE1PBE and B3PW91 provided satisfactory predictions (MAE = 0.34 and 0.38, respectively) with moderate computational time cost, while PBEPBE, TPSSTPSS and WB97XD led to unreliable results (MAE > 1). These findings validate the reliability of our model in predicting carboxylic acids pKa, with MAE well below 0.5 units, using a simplistic theoretical level and a low-cost computational approach

    Chapter 5: Peroxo-vanadium Complexes as Sustainable Catalysts in Oxidations, Halogenations and Other Organic Transformations

    No full text
    Vanadium in its high-oxidation state can activate hydrogen peroxide and other alkyl hydroperoxides, generating highly active oxidising species, namely vanadium peroxido-complexes. Several studies have been performed to deeply investigate structural features and reactivity of such species. In this chapter, the application of V-peroxido-complexes in oxidation and halogenation reactions will be discussed. Specifically, oxidation of different hydrocarbon substrates (i.e., alkanes, alkenes, aromatics), alcohols, phenols and sulphides, as well as the catalytic bromination reaction of diverse organic substrates will be addressed. Notably, vanadium peroxido-complexes result in effective catalysts to perform these transformations in very mild conditions. Importantly, the feasibility of the proposed procedures on a large scale allows their exploitation for appealing applicative purposes. Examples of lignin valorisation, fuel desulfurization, as well as clean synthetic methodologies for developing interesting building blocks for synthetic, industrial and pharmaceutic applications will be summarised

    Zinc porphyrin-anthraquinonylimidazole supramolecular dyads

    No full text
    In this work, the synthesis and spectroscopic characterization of new zinc porphyrin-anthraquinone dyads is proposed. In particular, electron donor units based on zinc meso-tetraphenylporphyrin (ZnTPP) and zinc octaethylporphyrin (ZnOEP) have been coupled with differently substituted anthraquinones as acceptors. The quinone moiety was properly functionalized with imidazole, thus ensuring porphyrin complexation through zinc ion coordination. Accordingly, absorption and emission measurements demonstrated that the coordination occurred, and calculated binding constants were in the range 6.6. 10(3)-3.9 10(4) M-1. Transient absorption spectroscopy for ZnTPP and ZnOEP dyads demonstrated that the electron transfer occurred, with the formation of the corresponding charge separated state, ZnTPP+-AQ(-). Moreover, in ZnOEP complexes, a strong correlation between the chain length and flexibility with the charge separated state lifetime was observed

    KuQuinone as a highly stable and reusable organic photocatalyst in selective oxidation of thioethers to sulfoxides

    No full text
    A chemoselective photocatalytic system to perform thioether oxidation to sulfoxide is presented. The light-induced oxidation process is here promoted by a metal-free quinoid catalyst, namely 1-hexylKuQuinone (KuQ). Reactions performed in a fluorinated solvent (i.e., HFIP), using O2 as the oxidant, at room temperature, lead to complete thioanisole conversion to methyl phenyl sulfoxide in 60 min. Remarkably, the system can be recharged and recycled without a loss of activity and selectivity, reaching turnover numbers (TONs) higher than 4000. Excellent catalytic performances and full selectivity have also been obtained for the photocatalytic oxidation of substituted thioanisole derivatives, aliphatic, cyclic, and diaryl thioethers. Likewise, the oxidation of heteroaromatic organosulfur compounds can be accomplished, with longer reaction times

    New Insights in the Computational pKb Determination of Primary Amines and Anilines

    No full text
    Extensive research has already provided reliable methods for the in silico prediction of pKa, while a trustworthy strategy for pKb determination is still being sought. Indeed, the approaches previously exploited for computing pKa have shown their weakness in predicting pKb. In the light of the exceptional reliability demonstrated in the pKa calculation of a wide panel of organic acids, in this work, we exploited our "easy to use methodology", based on the direct approach, to predict the pKb of primary amines. Herein, CAM-B3LYP was compared to WB97XD and B3PW91, exploring the solvation model based on density (SMD) and the polarizable continuum model (PCM), in the presence of two explicit water molecules. Noteworthy, CAM-B3LYP and WB97XD returned completely different solvent accessible surfaces (SAS) and electron potential maps (EPM) for the bases and the conjugated acids, independently from the nature of the substituents. Once again, CAM-B3LYP/SMD/2H2O method confirmed its remarkable reliability, leading to a minimum average error (MAE) lower than 0.3. This outstanding result strengthens the trustworthiness of our method, already successfully applied to predict the pKa of different substituted phenols and carboxylic acids. Thus, our "easy-to-use" process can predict also the pKb of primary ammines and anilines, always ensuring consistent outputs.Herein we propose for the first time a direct method, based on the DFT functional CAM-B3LYP, able to accurately predict the pKb of aromatic and aliphatic amines, with mean absolute errors lower than 0.3. Our "easy-to use" method ensures great reliability for a panel of primary amine and differently substituted anilines exploiting no external factors nor mathematical fittings. imag

    KuQuinones: a ten years tale of the new pentacyclic quinoid compound

    No full text
    Quinones are widespread in nature, as they participate, mainly as redox mediators, in several biochemical processes. Up to now, various synthetic quinones have been recommended in the literature as leading molecules in energy, biomedical and catalytic fields. In this brief review, we retraced our research activity in the last ten years, mainly dedicated to the study of a new class of peculiar pentacyclic conjugated quinoid compounds, synthesized in our group. In particular, their application as sensitive materials in photoelectrochemical devices and in biosensors, as photocatalysts in selective oxidation reactions, and their anticancer activity is here reviewed

    Unveiling KuQuinone redox species: an electrochemical and computational cross study

    Full text link
    The study of the electrochemical properties of variegated quinones is a fascinating topic in chemistry. In fact, redox reactions occurring with quinoid scaffolds are essential for most of their applications in biological systems, in photoelectrochemical devices, and in many other fields. In this paper, a detailed investigation of KuQuinones' redox behavior is presented. The distinctiveness of such molecules is the presence in the structure of two condensed naphthoquinone units, which implies the possibility to undergo multiple one-electron reduction processes. Solvent, supporting electrolyte, and hydrogen bond donor species effects have been elucidated. Changing the experimental parameters provoked significant shift of the redox potential for each reduction process. In particular, additions of 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol as a hydrogen bond donor in solution as well as Lewis acid coordination were crucial to obtain important shifts of the redox potentials toward more favorable values. UV-vis-NIR spectroelectrochemical experiments and DFT calculations are also presented to clarify the nature of the reduced species in solution
    corecore