An article Zinc Stabilized Azo-anion Radical in Dehydrogenative Synthesis of N-Heterocycles. An Exclusively Ligand Centered Redox Controlled Approach WOS:000664333800072 published article about NITROGEN-HETEROCYCLES; ELECTRONIC-STRUCTURES; COMPLEXES; OXIDATION; HYDROGENATION; REACTIVITY in [Das, Siuli; Mondal, Rakesh; Chakraborty, Gargi; Guin, Amit Kumar; Paul, Nanda D.] Indian Inst Engn Sci & Technol, Dept Chem, Howrah 711103, India; [Das, Abhishek] Indian Assoc Cultivat Sci, Sch Chem Sci, Kolkata 700032, India in 2021, Cited 79. The Name is (4-Methoxyphenyl)methanol. Through research, I have a further understanding and discovery of 105-13-5. Quality Control of (4-Methoxyphenyl)methanol
Herein we report an exclusively ligand-centered redox controlled approach for the dehydrogenation of a variety of N-heterocycles using a Zn(II)-stabilized azo-anion radical complex as the catalyst. A simple, easy-to-prepare, and bench-stable Zn(II)-complex (1b) featuring the tridentate arylazo pincer, 2-((4-chlorophenyl)diazenyl)-1,10-phenanthroline, in the presence of zinc-dust, undergoes reduction to form the azo-anion radical species [1b]which efficiently dehydrogenates various saturated N-heterocycles such as 1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-2-methylquinoline, 1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-isoquinoline, indoline, 2-phenyl-2,3-dihydro-1H-benzoimidazole, 2,3-dihydro-2-phenylquinazolin-4(1H)-one, and 1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-2-phenylquinazolines, among others, under air. The catalyst has further been found to be compatible with the cascade synthesis of these N-heterocycles via dehydrogenative coupling of alcohols with other suitable coupling partners under air. Mechanistic investigation reveals that the dehydrogenation reactions proceed via a one-electron hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) pathway where the zinc-stabilized azo-anion radical ligand abstracts the hydrogen atom from the organic substrate(s), and the whole catalytic cycle proceeds via the exclusive involvement of the ligand-centered redox events where the zinc acts only as the template.
Quality Control of (4-Methoxyphenyl)methanol. Welcome to talk about 105-13-5, If you have any questions, you can contact Das, S; Mondal, R; Chakraborty, G; Guin, AK; Das, A; Paul, ND or send Email.
Reference:
Alcohol – Wikipedia,
,Alcohols – Chemistry LibreTexts