Metathesis Catalysts in Tandem Catalysis: Methods and Mechanisms for Transformation

Metathesis Catalysts in Tandem Catalysis: Methods and Mechanisms for Transformation

Détails

Titre: Metathesis Catalysts in Tandem Catalysis: Methods and Mechanisms for Transformation
Auteur: Beach, Nicholas James
Résumé: The ever-worsening environmental crisis has stimulated development of less wasteful “green” technologies. To this end, tandem catalysis enables multiple catalytic cycles to be performed within a single reaction vessel, thereby eliminating intermediate processing steps and reducing solvent waste. Assisted tandem catalysis employs suitable chemical triggers to transform the initial catalyst into new species, thereby providing a mechanism for “switching on” secondary catalytic activity. This thesis demonstrates the importance of highly productive secondary catalysts through a comparative hydrogenation study involving prominent hydrogenation catalysts of tandem ring-opening metathesis polymerization (ROMP)-hydrogenation, of which hydridocarbonyl species were proved superior. This thesis illuminates optimal routes to hydridocarbonyls under conditions relevant to our ROMP-hydrogenation protocol, using Grubbs benzylidenes as isolable proxies for ROMP-propagating alkylidene species. Analogous studies of ruthenium methylidenes and ethoxylidenes illuminate optimal routes to hydridocarbonyls following ring-closing metathesis (RCM) and metathesis quenching, respectively. The formation of unexpected side products using aggressive chemical triggers is also discussed, and emphasizes the need for cautious design of the post-metathesis trigger phase.
Date: 2012
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10393/22731
Superviseur: Fogg, Deryn
Faculté: Sciences / Science
Degré: PhD

Fichier(s) constituant ce document :

Fichier(s) Taille Format
Beach_Nicholas_James_2012_thesis.pdf 13.49Mb application/pdf Voir/Ouvrir

Cet article est disponible dans les collections suivantes

Détails


Nos coordonnées

Pavillon Morisset (carte)
65, rue Université
Ottawa ON Canada
K1N 6N5

Tél. 613-562-5800 (4563)
Fax 613-562-5195

ruor@uottawa.ca