Multicatalysis
Combining 3D-Printed Devices and Magnetic
Nanoparticles in One-Pot Reactions: Steps Forward in Compartmentation
and Recyclability of Catalysts
posted on 2019-06-21, 00:00authored byAntonio Sanchez Díaz-Marta, Susana Yáñez, Carmen R. Tubío, V. Laura Barrio, Yolanda Piñeiro, Rosa Pedrido, José Rivas, Manuel Amorín, Francisco Guitián, Alberto Coelho
A tricatalytic
compartmentalized system that immobilizes metallic
species to perform one-pot sequential functionalization is described:
a three-dimensional (3D)-printed palladium monolith, ferritic copper(I)
magnetic nanoparticles, and a 3D-printed polypropylene capsule-containing
copper(II) loaded onto polystyrene-supported 1,5,7-triazabicyclo[4.4.0]dec-5-ene
(PS-TBD) allowed the rapid synthesis of diverse substituted 1-([1,1′-biphenyl]-4-yl)-1H-1,2,3-triazoles. The procedure is based on the Chan–Lam
azidation/copper alkyne–azide cycloaddition/Suzuki reaction
strategy in the solution phase. This catalytic system enabled the
efficient assembly of the final compounds in high yields without the
need for special additives or intermediate isolation. The monolithic
catalyst-containing immobilized palladium species was synthesized
by surface chemical modification of a 3D-printed silica monolith using
a soluble polyimide resin as a key reagent, thus creating an extremely
robust composite. All three immobilized catalysts described here were
easily recovered and reused in numerous cycles. This work exemplifies
the role of 3D printing in the design and manufacture of devices for
compartmented multicatalytic systems to carry out complex one-pot
transformations.