Catalysis Database

Chemoselective anti-Markovnikov hydroamination of ,-ethylenic compounds with amines using montmorillonite clay

Joseph, Trissa and G.V , Shanbhag and Dhanashri P, Sawant and S.B., Halligudi (2006) Chemoselective anti-Markovnikov hydroamination of ,-ethylenic compounds with amines using montmorillonite clay. Journal of Molecular Catalysis A: Chemical , 250 . pp. 210-217.

[img] PDF - Requires a PDF viewer such as GSview, Xpdf or Adobe Acrobat Reader
291kB

Abstract

The catalytic activity of montmorillonite clays as a catalyst for the hydroamination of ,-ethylenic compounds with amines was tested. Aniline and substituted anilines reacted with ,-ethylenic compounds in the presence of catalytic amount of commercially available clay to afford exclusively anti-Markovnikov adduct in excellent yields. Aniline reacted with ethyl acrylate to yield only anti-Markovnikov adduct N-[2- (ethoxycarbonyl)ethyl]aniline (mono-addition product). No Markovnikov adduct (N-[1-(ethoxycarbonyl)ethyl]aniline and double addition product N,N-bis[2-(ethoxycarbonyl)ethyl]aniline were formed under selected reaction conditions. For a better exploitation of the catalytic activity in terms of increased activity and improved selectivity for the mono-addition product, the reaction parameters were optimized in terms of temperature, solvent, reactant mole ratio. under optimized reaction conditions, montmorillonite clay K-10 showed a superior catalytic performance in the hydroamination of ethyl acrylate with aniline with a conversion of aniline to mono-addition product (almost 100% chemoselectivity) with a high rate constant 0.3414 min−1 compared to the reported protocols. The dependence of conversion of aniline over different types of montmorillonite clays (K-10, K-20, K-30, Al-Pillared clay and untreated clay) has also been discussed. The activities of clay for the hydroamination of different aromatic and aliphatic amines have also been investigated. Under harsh reaction conditions (increased temperature and long reaction time) small amounts of di-addition products were observed. The kinetics data has been interpreted using the initial rate approach model.

Item Type:Article
Subjects:Science > Chemistry
ID Code:328
Deposited By:INVALID USER
Deposited On:02 Mar 2007 03:57
Last Modified:19 Mar 2007 21:34

Repository Staff Only: item control page