Ultra-small cobalt nanoparticles from molecularly-defined Co-salen complexes for catalytic synthesis of amines

Abstract

We report the synthesis of in situ generated cobalt nanoparticles from molecularly defined complexes as efficient and selective catalysts for reductive amination reactions. In the presence of ammonia and hydrogen, cobalt-salen complexes such as cobalt(ii)-N,N′-bis(salicylidene)-1,2-phenylenediamine produce ultra-small (2-4 nm) cobalt-nanoparticles embedded in a carbon-nitrogen framework. The resulting materials constitute stable, reusable and magnetically separable catalysts, which enable the synthesis of linear and branched benzylic, heterocyclic and aliphatic primary amines from carbonyl compounds and ammonia. The isolated nanoparticles also represent excellent catalysts for the synthesis of primary, secondary as well as tertiary amines including biologically relevant N-methyl amines. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.

Description
Keywords
Aliphatic compounds, Amines, Ammonia, Carbonyl compounds, Nanocatalysts, Nanoparticles, Synthesis (chemical), Aliphatic primary amines, Catalytic synthesis, Co salen complexes, Cobalt nanoparticles, Magnetically separable catalysts, Reductive amination, Resulting materials, Selective catalysts, Cobalt compounds
Citation
Senthamarai, T., Chandrashekhar, V. G., Gawande, M. B., Kalevaru, N. V., Zbořil, R., Kamer, P. C. J., et al. (2020). Ultra-small cobalt nanoparticles from molecularly-defined Co-salen complexes for catalytic synthesis of amines. 11(11). https://doi.org//10.1039/c9sc04963k
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License
CC BY-NC 3.0 Unported