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

2020, Senthamarai, Thirusangumurugan, Chandrashekhar, Vishwas G., Gawande, Manoj B., Kalevaru, Narayana V., Zbořil, Radek, Kamer, Paul C.J., Jagadeesh, Rajenahally V., Beller, Matthias

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.

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Simple ruthenium-catalyzed reductive amination enables the synthesis of a broad range of primary amines

2018, Senthamarai, Thirusangumurugan, Murugesan, Kathiravan, Schneidewind, Jacob, Kalevaru, Narayana V., Baumann, Wolfgang, Neumann, Helfried, Kamer, Paul C. J., Beller, Matthias, Jagadeesh, Rajenahally V.

The production of primary benzylic and aliphatic amines, which represent essential feedstocks and key intermediates for valuable chemicals, life science molecules and materials, is of central importance. Here, we report the synthesis of this class of amines starting from carbonyl compounds and ammonia by Ru-catalyzed reductive amination using H2. Key to success for this synthesis is the use of a simple RuCl2(PPh3)3 catalyst that empowers the synthesis of >90 various linear and branched benzylic, heterocyclic, and aliphatic amines under industrially viable and scalable conditions. Applying this catalyst, −NH2 moiety has been introduced in functionalized and structurally diverse compounds, steroid derivatives and pharmaceuticals. Noteworthy, the synthetic utility of this Ru-catalyzed amination protocol has been demonstrated by upscaling the reactions up to 10 gram-scale syntheses. Furthermore, in situ NMR studies were performed for the identification of active catalytic species. Based on these studies a mechanism for Ru-catalyzed reductive amination is proposed.