New salts for chemical soups
A facile route to versatile organozinc compounds
Munich, 08/29/2011
One of the most prominent applications for organozinc reagents is their use for the so-called Negishi cross-coupling, a type of reaction that provides a simple means of linking carbon atoms together in a virtually unlimited variety of ways, and earned its discoverer a share of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 2010. “The new class of organozinc pivalates makes it possible to employ different solvents in the Negishi cross-coupling reaction and greatly extends the spectrum of coupling partners it can be applied to,” says Sebastian Bernhardt, who is the lead author on the new study. “The new reagents contain magnesium salts, which also facilitate the addition of organozinc pivalates to carbonyl groups.” This opens the way to their use for a whole series of applications relevant to the industrial manufacture of fine chemicals. The new scheme for synthesis of these compounds is the subject of an international patent application. (suwe/PH)
Publication:
Preparation of Solid Salt-Stabilized Functionalized Organozinc Compounds and their Application to Cross-Coupling and Carbonyl Addition Reactions
Sebastian Bernhardt, Georg Manolikakes, Thomas Kunz, Paul Knochel;
Angewandte Chemie International Edition, August, 24, 2011,
The manuscript was classified as a VIP (Very Important Paper).
International Patent Application:
Organozinc Complexes and Processes for Making and Using the Same
Sebastian Bernhardt, Georg Manolikakes, Paul Knochel
Contact:
Prof. Dr. Paul Knochel
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, LMU Munich
Phone: +49 89/2180-77681
Fax: +49 89/2180-77680
Email: paul.knochel@cup.uni-muenchen.de
Web: www.knochel.cup.uni-muenchen.de
