POLYMER-SUPPORTED CHELATING AGENT
20180339286 ยท 2018-11-29
Inventors
- HASSAN SAID BAZZI (DOHA, QA)
- Mohammed Al-Hashimi (Doha, QA)
- David E. Bergbreiter (College Station, TX, US)
- DALILA CHOUIKHI (DOHA, QA)
Cpc classification
B01J45/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J31/403
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C08F8/34
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C22B3/1616
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01J20/265
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C22B7/009
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01J20/3085
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01J20/26
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C22B3/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01J20/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C22B7/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
The polymer-supported chelating agent is polyisobutylene having a thiol-thioether terminal group. The polymer-supported chelating agent is made by reaction of the terminal carbon double bond of polyisobutylene with 1,2-ethanedithiol in a one-step click reaction, resulting in PIB functionalized with a thiol-thioether sequestering group. In use, the polymer-supported chelating agent is added to a biphasic solvent system containing a transition metal in solution for removal of the transition metal by liquid/liquid extraction. The transition metal is chelated or sequestered by the chelating agent and removed in a nonpolar organic phase, such as heptane.
Claims
1. A polymer-supported chelating agent, comprising polyisobutylene having a terminal group, the terminal group being a chelating agent.
2. The polymer-supported chelating agent according to claim 1, wherein the chelating agent comprises a thiol-thioether.
3. The polymer-supported chelating agent according to claim 1, having the formula: ##STR00002##
4. A method of synthesizing the polymer-supported chelating agent according to claim 3, comprising the steps of: dissolving alkene-terminated polyisobutylene and 1,2-ethanedithiol in a solvent mixture of ethanol and heptane, the solvent mixture being 1:1 ethanol:heptane volume-to-volume to form a reaction mixture; adding a polymerization initiator to the reaction mixture; and irradiating the reaction mixture with ultraviolet light.
5. The method of synthesizing the polymer-supported chelating agent according to claim 4, wherein said polymerization initiator comprises azobisisobutyronitrile (AIBN).
6. The method of synthesizing the polymer-supported chelating agent according to claim 4, wherein said polymerization initiator comprises di-tert-butyl peroxide (DTBP).
7. The method of synthesizing the polymer-supported chelating agent according to claim 4, wherein said step of irradiating the reaction mixture with ultraviolet light comprises irradiating the reaction mixture with ultraviolet light at a wavelength of 365 nm.
8. The method of synthesizing the polymer-supported chelating agent according to claim 4, wherein said step of irradiating the reaction mixture with ultraviolet light at a wavelength of 365 nm is performed at 25 C.
9. A method of removing a transition metal from a polar solvent using the polymer-supported chelating agent according to claim 3, comprising the steps of: dissolving at least a stoichiometric quantity of the polymer-supported chelating agent according to claim 3 in an extraction solvent; mixing the extraction solvent with a polar solvent having the transition metal in solution to selectively extract the transition metal into the extraction solvent by chelation of the transition metal; waiting for the extraction solvent and the polar solvent to separate into a nonpolar phase and a polar phase; and separating the nonpolar phase from the polar phase, the polymer-supported chelating agent having the transition metal chelated thereto being selectively solvated in the nonpolar phase.
10. The method of removing a transition metal from a polar solvent according to claim 9, wherein said extraction solvent comprises heptane.
11. The method of removing a transition metal from a polar solvent according to claim 9, wherein said extraction solvent comprises dichloromethane.
12. The method of removing a transition metal from a polar solvent according to claim 9, wherein said mixing step further comprises heating the mixed extraction and polar solvents at 80 C.
13. The method of removing a transition metal from a polar solvent according to claim 9, wherein said at least stoichiometric quantity comprises a six-fold excess of the polymer-supported chelating agent according to claim 3.
14. A method of synthesizing a polymer-supported chelating agent, comprising the steps of: dissolving alkene-terminated polyisobutylene and 1,2-ethanedithiol in a solvent mixture of ethanol and heptane, the solvent mixture being 1:1 ethanol:heptane volume-to-volume to form a reaction mixture; adding a polymerization initiator to the reaction mixture; and irradiating the reaction mixture with ultraviolet light at a wavelength of 365 nm.
15. The method of synthesizing the polymer-supported chelating agent according to claim 14, wherein said polymerization initiator comprises azobisisobutyronitrile (AIBN).
16. A method of recovering a transition metal of a transition metal catalyst from a spent reaction mixture, comprising the steps of: dissolving a six-fold excess over a stoichiometric quantity of a polymer-supported chelating agent having the formula: ##STR00003## into a nonpolar organic solvent to form an extraction solvent; adding a polar solvent to the spent reaction mixture containing the transition metal catalyst, the transition metal catalyst being soluble in the polar solvent, in order to form a polar phase; mixing the extraction solvent with the polar phase having the transition metal in solution to selectively extract the transition metal into the extraction solvent by chelation of the transition metal; waiting for the extraction solvent and the polar solvent to separate into a nonpolar phase and a polar phase; and separating the nonpolar phase from the polar phase, the polymer-supported chelating agent having the transition metal chelated thereto being selectively solvated in the nonpolar phase to recover the transition metal of the transition metal catalyst.
17. The method of recovering a transition metal catalyst according to claim 16, wherein said nonpolar organic solvent comprises heptane.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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[0017] Similar reference characters denote corresponding features consistently throughout the attached drawings.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0018] The polymer-supported chelating agent is polyisobutylene having a thiol-thioether terminal group. The polymer-supported chelating agent is made by reaction of the terminal carbon double bond of polyisobutylene with 1,2-ethanedithiol in a one-step click reaction, resulting in PIB functionalized with a thiol-thioether sequestering group. In use, the polymer-supported chelating agent is added to a biphasic solvent system containing a transition metal in solution for removal of the transition metal by liquid/liquid extraction. The transition metal is chelated or sequestered by the chelating agent and removed in a nonpolar organic phase, such as heptane.
[0019] The one-step click reaction avoids the multistep synthesis typically required to make polymer-bound catalysts that are soluble in organic solvents. In model experiments, a range of transition metal salts of Co.sup.2+, Ni.sup.2+, Cu.sup.2+, Pd.sup.2+ and Ru.sup.3+ were successfully extracted from aqueous or polar organic solutions into immiscible heptane solution of a PIB-bound thioether-thiol sequestrant. This PIB derivative demonstrated an excellent performance with quantitative metal complexation in many cases. This functional polymer is efficient even in the presence of competing ligands that are typically used in homogeneous catalysis. In addition, this sequestrant was successfully used for treatment of aqueous and polar organic solutions of crude product mixtures obtained in model Pd-catalyzed Suzuki cross-coupling and Buchwald-Hartwig amination reactions, as well as in a Cu(I)-catalyzed alkyne/azide cyclization (CuAAC) reaction.
[0020] The polymer-supported chelating agent will be better understood with reference to the following examples
Example 1
Synthesis of the Polymer-Supported Chelating Agent
[0021] Dithiol-functionalized polybutadiene 1 was prepared via a green and simple single step radical thiol-ene click reaction between commercially available and inexpensive 1,2-ethanedithiol and alkene-terminated PIB Glissopal 1000 (DP.sub.n=18), as depicted in
##STR00001##
[0022] based on .sup.1H NMR spectroscopic analysis (see
Example 2
Proposed Mechanism of Action
[0023] The PIB-bound sequestrant we prepared contains two different binding sitesthioether and thiol. They have differing complexation activity and affinity to transition metals. .sup.1H NMR spectroscopy titration of 1 with palladium acetate was used to understand better the complexation of 1 to Pd.sup.2+ (see
Example 3
Sequestering Transition Metals from Aqueous Solution and Polar Organic Solvent
[0024] A series of experiments were performed to determine the ability of 1 to sequester metals (in particular Cu.sup.2+ and Pd.sup.2+) from various polar solvents, including water. Our initial studies involved sequestration of transition metal cations such as Co.sup.2+, Ni.sup.2+, Cu.sup.2+, Pd.sup.2+ and Ru.sup.3+ from solutions of their salts in deionized water, methanol or acetonitrile by a heptane solution of 1. In a typical experiment, a solution of sequestrant in heptane was added to a solution of CuSO.sub.4 in water and shaken, with resulting formation of an emulsion. Shaking was continued for 2 h. During this time, visually observed discoloration of the aqueous phase qualitatively indicated a high level of Cu.sup.2+ sequestration. Quantitative inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES) analysis of the polar phase that indicated 60-fold decrease of copper content (Table 1) confirmed this observation. A control experiment with heptane that did not contain 1 did not result in any metal extraction, based on ICP-OES.
[0025] According to the results in Table 1, polymer 1 demonstrates good to excellent sequestration efficiency for a variety of transition metals under biphasic conditions. The best results were obtained for copper, palladium and ruthenium ions (Table 1, entries 5-13). In case of Co.sup.2+ and Ni.sup.2+ cations, sequestration efficiency for neutral solutions was modest, but it significantly increased under basic conditions. The same trend was observed for other metals. This observation can be explained by formation of poorly soluble metal hydroxides with enhanced affinity to sequestrant 1. Although 99.5% of palladium was absorbed from water solution in only 15 minutes, sequestration from acetonitrile required extended times to achieve the same efficiency. This observation is attributed to competitive complexation of Pd.sup.2+ cation by the acetonitrile.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Metal sequestration by 1 under biphasic conditions Concentration, Sequestration Time, ppm efficiency, Entry Metal Solvent h initial final % 1 Co water 4 26.0 17.4 33.1 2 water .sup.a 4 26.0 2.64 89.8 3 Ni water 4 26.0 17.9 31.2 4 water .sup.a 4 26.0 3.72 85.7 5 Cu water 2 21.6 0.360 98.3 6 MeOH 2 14.4 0.0250 99.8 7 Ru water 4 26.0 1.02 96.1 8 water .sup.a 4 26.0 0.0200 99.9 9 Pd water 2 500 0.270 99.9 10 water 0.25 22.5 0.120 99.5 11 water .sup.a 1.5 26.8 0.0250 99.9 12 CH.sub.3CN 0.25 50.0 2.90 94.2 13 CH.sub.3CN 1.5 50.0 0.160 99.7 .sup.a pH = 10
Example 4
Sequestering Palladium in Presence of Competitive Ligands
[0026] We also investigated whether a heptane solution of 1 could competitively sequester palladium species from polar organic solutions in the presence of other ligands that are commonly used in catalytic reactions. According to ICP-OES results (Table 2) high levels of Pd were sequestered by 1 in 4 h, in most cases. Sequestration efficiency tended to increase with time and generally exceeded 96%, except for samples where Pd was complexed by P(o-Anisyl).sub.3, P(o-Tolyl).sub.3, RuPhos, DPPF and Hermann's ligand. Even in those cases, around 90-95% of Pd could be removed with 1 if the extraction time was increased.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Competitive sequestration of palladium complexes from acetonitrile solutions Concentration, ppm Efficiency, % Pd complex in 4 h in 12 h in 4 h in 12 h (PPh.sub.3).sub.2Pd(OAc).sub.2 0.620 0.39 98.8 99.2 (P(o-Anisyl).sub.3).sub.2Pd(OAc).sub.2 6.36 3.17 87.3 93.7 (P(o-Tolyl).sub.3).sub.2Pd(OAc).sub.2 6.03 1.94 87.9 96.1 (PCy.sub.3).sub.2Pd(OAc).sub.2 0.610 0.560 98.8 98.9 (RuPhos).sub.2Pd(OAc).sub.2 9.24 2.01 81.5 96.0 (DPPF)Pd(OAc).sub.2 10.2 2.67 79.5 94.7 (DPEPhos)Pd(OAc).sub.2 2.08 1.02 95.8 98.0 (XPhos)Pd(OAc).sub.2 0.820 0.440 98.4 99.1 Pd.sub.2(dba).sub.3 2.65 1.47 97.3 98.5 (C.sub.6H.sub.5CN).sub.2PdCl.sub.2 0.430 0.430 99.3 99.1 (CH.sub.3CN).sub.2PdCl.sub.2 0.310 0.190 99.4 99.6 Herrmann's catalyst 8.05 5.19 83.9 89.6
[0027] Metal sequestration is often important in catalytic reactions where the catalysts end up in a product phase. Our results in Tables 1 and 2 suggest that the soluble polymer bound sequestrant 1 should be useful in these cases. To explore this question, we decided to investigate the use of 1 for removal of the Pd residues from Suzuki cross-coupling (see
Example 5
Sequestering Suzuki Cross-Coupling Catalyst
[0028] Reaction of phenyl boronic acid 3 with different substituted bromoarenes under typical coupling conditions described above using 2.5 mol % of Pd(OAc).sub.2 afforded biaryls 4a-4c in toluene (
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Palladium/copper sequestration from model reaction mixtures Metal concentration, ppm Sequestration Substrate Crude treated efficiency, % 4a 275 0.170 99.9 4b 275 0.180 99.9 4c 275 0.230 99.9 6a 171 1.25 99.3 6b 246 0.130 99.9 6c 290 63.2.sup.a 78.2.sup.a 6c 290 9.01.sup.b 96.9.sup.b 8 727 0.300 99.9 .sup.aat 25 C.; .sup.bat 80 C.
Example 6
Sequestering Buchwald-Hartwig Amination Reaction Catalyst
[0029] Bromobenzene and 2-bromopyridine were successfully coupled to morpholine under neat conditions using 1 mol % of Pd(OAc).sub.2 and RuPhos as a ligand to afford compounds 6a,6b (see
Example 7
Sequestering Cu(I)-Catalyzed Alkyne/Azide Cyclization Reaction Catalyst
[0030] The azide-alkyne click reaction between benzyl azide 7 and dimethyl ethynyl carbinol in the presence of 15 mol % of Cu led to formation of a triazole 8. Copper sequestration afforded nearly 2500-fold reduction of the residual Cu amount in the reaction product (Table 3) that corresponds to more than 99.9% efficiency.
[0031] The results obtained in these experiments show that a heptane-soluble, PIB-bound thioether-thiol metal scavenger is easy to synthesize and is generally highly effective at removing metals from aqueous or polar organic solutions under biphasic conditions. In many cases, this sequestrating agent removes >99% of the metal from the aqueous or polar organic phase. This material is successful at metal sequestration even when there are other ligands present and can be used for the treatment of crude reaction mixtures following catalytic reactions. Even in cases where the sequestration is not initially quantitative, minor experimental changes are effective in producing near quantitative metal sequestration.
[0032] It is to be understood that the polymer-supported chelating agent is not limited to the specific embodiments described above, but encompasses any and all embodiments within the scope of the generic language of the following claims enabled by the embodiments described herein, or otherwise shown in the drawings or described above in terms sufficient to enable one of ordinary skill in the art to make and use the claimed subject matter.