Role of the Medium in High Pressure Organic Reactions. A Review
Author: Jenner G.
Source: Mini-Reviews in Organic Chemistry, Volume 1, Number 1, January 2004 , pp. 9-26(18)
Publisher: Bentham Science Publishers
Abstract:
As a thermodynamical parameter, pressure modifies the physical and physicochemical properties of liquids considered as media for organic synthesis. In a first part, the review details the effect of pressure on solubility, freezing point, and viscosity. The second paragraph examines the pressure effects on solute-medium interactions associated with volume changes. There are two main pressure-sensitive interactions: electrostatic and solvophobic interactions. i) Considering electrostrictive effects, the pressure rate acceleration is highest in apolar media. This is illuminated by many examples taken from unimolecular reactions, [4+2] and [2+2] cycloadditions, Michael reactions, Menshutkin quaternisations, Morita-Baylis-Hillman additions. ii) Pressure reduces the magnitude of solvophobic (hydrophobic, fluorophobic), interactions meaning less pressure sensitivity of reaction rates. In the last part, future high pressure media are outlined i.e. supercritical fluids and ionic liquids. However, the results reported to date do not permit to draw a clear conclusion. High pressure synthetic applications are described in the light of the above emphasized effects. The results presented in the review should allow a judicious choice of the right medium for a rational design of a liquid phase organic synthesis under pressure.Keywords: pressure; medium effects; electrostriction; solvophobic interactions; ionic liquids
Document Type: Review article
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1570193043489015
Affiliations: 1: Laboratoire de Piezochimie Organique (UMR CNRS 7509), 1 rue Blaise Pascal, Universite Louis Pasteur, 67008 Strasbourg, France.
Publication date: 2004-01-01
- Mini-Reviews in Organic Chemistry publishes original reviews on all areas of organic chemistry including synthesis, bioorganic, medicinal, natural products, organometallic, supramolecular, molecular recognition, and physical organic chemistry. The emphasis will be on publishing quality papers very rapidly. Mini-reviews will be processed rapidly by taking full advantage of Internet technology for both the submission and review of manuscripts.
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- By this author: Jenner G.

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