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楼主  发表于: 2012-05-05 13:29

 【课题主介绍】The Sanford Group

该课题组主要是从事C-H键活化,选择反应。

I. New Methods for the Oxidative Functionalization of Carbon–Hydrogen Bonds

The development of methods for the oxidative transformation of inert C–H bonds into new functional groups (e.g., alcohols, esters, ethers, amines, halides, carbon-carbon bonds) remains a tremendous challenge in organic synthesis. Such procedures have the potential to fundamentally change the way chemists approach the assembly and late-stage modification of natural products, drug candidates, organic materials, and fine chemicals. There are three major challenges in this area: (i) C–H bonds are typically strong and kinetically inert (therefore harsh conditions are often required to achieve C–H bond activation), (ii) chemoselective oxidation is challenging because over-oxidation is highly thermodynamically favorable, and (iii) organic molecules generally contain many different types of C–H bonds, making it difficult to obtain a single functionalized product in these reactions. Current research in the Sanford group is working to address all of these challenges and to develop novel transition metal catalyzed methods for the site-, chemo-, regio-, and stereoselective functionalization of C–H bonds in the context of complex organic molecules. Our interests in this area include:

Development of novel organic reactions and methods
Application of these methods in the context of complex molecules
Rational design of new catalysts informed by detailed mechanistic ysis

II. New Methods for the Oxidative Functionalization of Alkenes and Alkynes

A second area of research in the Sanford group involves developing new synthetic tools for the oxidative 1,1- and 1,2-difunctionalization of alkenes and alkynes with high levels of regio-, diastereo-, and enantiocontrol. Such transformations represent an attractive route to densely functionalized acyclic and heterocyclic products from simple and readily available starting materials. Our approach to these reactions has involved developing oxidative methods for the functionalization of Pd sigma-alkyl intermediates. The resulting Pd(II/IV) pathways offer three highly attractive features relative to related (and much more common) Pd(II/0) processes. First, Pd(IV) alkyls are generally not susceptible to beta-hydride elimination – a common decomposition pathway for their Pd(II) ogues. Second, the Pd(IV) intermediates participate in bond-constructions that are extremely challenging in the context of more traditional Pd(II/0) catalysis. Third, the catalysts and intermediates in Pd(II/IV) chemistry are generally air and moisture stable, making these reactions convenient and practical for organic synthesis.

III. Synthesis and Reactivity of High Oxidation State Late Transition Metal Complexes

A third research area in the Sanford lab involves studies on the synthesis and reactivity of unusual high oxidation state complexes of late transition metals (e.g., Pd(III), Pd(IV), Pt(III), Ni(III), Ni(IV)). Such complexes have been implicated as reactive intermediates in a variety of important catalytic transformations, including arene/alkane C–H bond functionalization, olefin aminohalogenation and aminoacetoxylation, and enyne cyclization/halogenation. However, organometallic compounds in these oxidation states (particularly those relevant to catalytic intermediates) remain rare, because their characteristic instability renders them difficult to observe, let alone isolate. Our goals are to rationally design ligands that will stabilize high oxidation state complexes and then study the reactivity of these species towards C–X bond forming reductive elimination as well as other fundamental organometallic transformations. This work will provide fundamental insights into the reactivity of high oxidation state group 10 metals that should ultimately find application in catalysis.

IV. C–H Functionalization of Methane and Benzene

A final area of interest is the development of organometallic catalysts for the direct oxidation of simple alkanes and arenes (e.g., methane and benzene). This is a problem of critical global significance, since natural gas (which is >90% methane) is becoming an increasingly important precursor to carbon-containing chemicals and liquid fuels as petroleum supplies diminish. Current methods for methane conversion involve steam reforming to syngas followed by the Fisher Tropsch process (to access higher alkanes) or methanol synthesis; however, many major chemical companies have deemed this two-step sequence too costly and inefficient for long-term implementation. The direct conversion of benzene to phenol is another important industrial target, as the currently practiced phenol synthesis (the “cumene process”) is both energy intensive and low-yielding. As part of the NSF Center for Enabling New Technologies through Catalysis (CENTC), the Sanford group has been actively involved in catalyst development to address these important challenges. This work is a collaboration with Professors Jim Mayer (University of Washington), Karen Goldberg (University of Washington), Mike Heinekey (University of Washington), Bill Jones (University of Rochester), and Elon Ison (North Carolina State University).

课题组网址:http://www.umich.edu/~mssgroup/index.html
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