JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
Please note that UPSpace will be unavailable from Friday, 2 May at 18:00 (South African Time) until Sunday, 4 May at 20:00 due to scheduled system upgrades.
We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause and appreciate your understanding.
The Synthesis of Immobilised Reagents Based on a Polymerised Triphenylphosphine Scaffold for Use in Flow Chemistry Applications
Throughout the years, there have been challenges associated with the purification of some
critical reactions which have proved to be time consuming and tedious. However, these
difficulties have been grandly simplified by the use of immobilized reagents which can be
readily removed by filtration and thus decreasing the purification time. An added advantage,
is the incorporation of the solid-supported reagents onto flow reactors to facilitate in-line
purification thus minimizing exposure to hazardous chemicals, waste and reaction time for
some protocols.
In this thesis the application of polymer-bound triphenylphosphine was compared using
commercial unsupported, commercial polystyrene-supported and in-house modified
polymer-supported triphenylphosphine reagents in the ozonolysis, Wittig and Suzuki-Miyaura
coupling reactions. Validation of the supports was compared under both batch and flow
conditions in each case.
Our in-house polymer-supported triphenylphosphine reagent, formed by precipitation
polymerisation of diphenyl (4-vinylphenyl)phosphine, showed a phosphorus loading of
1.85 mmol/g and was benchmarked against commercial polystyrene-supported triphenylphosphine which had a phosphorus loading of 3.00 mmol/g.
Firstly, we demonstrated the application of polymer-bound triphenylphosphine as a
reductant in ozonolysis reactions under batch-flow hybrid conditions. The transformations
were conducted using our newly developed ozonolysis flow setup which allowed reactions to
be performed at ambient temperatures. Aldehydes were formed in moderate to high yields
of 52-70% at room temperature, with cooled temperatures favouring the formation of the
analogous acids. Of key importance was that the in-house polymer-supported
triphenylphosphine reagent showed an improvement in yields after 48 hours relative to the
commercial polystyrene reagent, with a four-fold reduction in the amount of reductant used.
Secondly, we demonstrated the conversion of commercial polystyrene-supported
triphenylphosphine and in-house polymer-supported triphenylphosphine to Wittig benzyl
phosphonium salts which gave a phosphorous elemental loading of 0.818 mmol/g and
1.614 mmol/g respectively. The formation of alkene products was observed at 30 °C when using in-house polymer-supported phosphonium salt but product formation was only
observed at 60 °C for the analogous commercial polystyrene support. The Wittig reactions
under batch and flow conditions gave high yields for the unsupported phosphonium salt. In
contrast, the commercial and in-house polymer-supported phosphonium salts gave varying
yields, which were substrate dependant.
Lastly, we transformed in-house polymer-supported triphenylphosphine reagent into
polymer-supported tetrakis(triphenylphosphine)palladium catalysts under batch and flow
conditions affording palladium loadings of 0.460 mmol/g and 0.689 mmol/g respectively. The
prepared catalysts were benchmarked against commercial polystyrene-supported
tetrakis(triphenylphosphine)palladium catalyst which has a reported palladium loading of
0.500 mmol/g. Demonstrating their use in Suzuki-Miyaura coupling reactions under batch and
flow conditions showed comparative results. We observed an increase in yield for both the
commercial and in-house catalysts under flow conditions compared to batch use with varying
yields achieved with a single reaction. We were also able to readily recycle the substrates
across the catalyst house in a packed-bed reactor affording close to quantitative conversion.
Overall, our in-house polymer-supported reagent and catalyst were an improvement to the
commercially available polymer-supported counterparts. For the ozonolysis reactions, fourfold less reductant was used, reaction activity was observed at lower temperatures for the
Wittig reaction and our catalyst offered an economical alternative to expensive reagent in
Suzuki-Miyaura reactions. Although the unsupported reagents gave higher yields, the
approach suffered from complicated purification protocols to remove unreacted
triphenylphosphine and spent triphenylphosphine oxide. When employing flow conditions
using solid-supported reagents/catalysts this was greatly simplified as these reagents
remained in the packed-bed reactor.
Description:
Thesis (PhD (Chemistry))--University of Pretoria, 2020.