2 resultados para Hydrolytic Kinetic Resolution

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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Water is a safe, harmless, and environmentally benign solvent. From an eco-sustainable chemistry perspective, the use of water instead of organic solvent is preferred to decrease environmental contamination. Moreover, water has unique physical and chemical properties, such as high dielectric constant and high cohesive energy density compared to most organic solvents. The different interactions between water and substrates, make water an interesting candidate as a solvent or co-solvent from an industrial and laboratory perspective. In this regard, organic reactions in aqueous media are of current interest. In addition, from practical and synthetic standpoints, a great advantage of using water is immediately evident, since it does not require any preliminary drying process. This thesis was found on this aspect of chemical research, with particular attention to the mechanisms which control organo and bio-catalysis outcome. The first part of the study was focused on the aldol reaction. In particular, for the first time it has been analyzed for the first time the stereoselectivity of the condensation reaction between 3-pyridincarbaldehyde and the cyclohexanone, catalyzed by morpholine and 4-tertbutyldimethylsiloxyproline, using water as sole solvent. This interest has resulted in countless works appeared in the literature concerning the use of proline derivatives as effective catalysts in organic aqueous environment. These studies showed good enantio and diastereoselectivities but they did not present an in depth study of the reaction mechanism. The analysis of the products diastereomeric ratios through the Eyring equation allowed to compare the activation parameters (ΔΔH≠ and ΔΔS≠) of the diastereomeric reaction paths, and to compare the different type of catalysis. While morpholine showed constant diasteromeric ratio at all temperatures, the O(TBS)-L-proline, showed a non-linear Eyring diagram, with two linear trends and the presence of an inversion temperature (Tinv) at 53 ° C, which denotes the presence of solvation effects by water. A pH-dependent study allowed to identify two different reaction mechanisms, and in the case of O(TBS)-L-proline, to ensure the formation of an enaminic species, as a keyelement in the stereoselective process. Moreover, it has been studied the possibility of using the 6- aminopenicillanic acid (6-APA) as amino acid-type catalyst for aldol condensation between cyclohexanone and aromatic aldehydes. A detailed analysis of the catalyst regarding its behavior in different organic solvents and pH, allowed to prove its potential as a candidate for green catalysis. Best results were obtained in neat conditions, where 6-APA proved to be an effective catalyst in terms of yields. The catalyst performance in terms of enantio- and diastereo-selectivity, was impaired by the competition between two different catalytic mechanisms: one via imine-enamine mechanism and one via a Bronsted-acid catalysis. The last part of the thesis was dedicated to the enzymatic catalysis, with particular attention to the use of an enzyme belonging to the class of alcohol dehydrogenase, the Horse Liver Alcohol Dehydrogenase (HLADH) which was selected and used in the enantioselective reduction of aldehydes to enantiopure arylpropylic alcohols. This enzyme has showed an excellent responsiveness to this type of aldehydes and a good tolerance toward organic solvents. Moreover, the fast keto-enolic equilibrium of this class of aldehydes that induce the stereocentre racemization, allows the dynamic-kinetic resolution (DKR) to give the enantiopure alcohol. By analyzing the different reaction parameters, especially the pH and the amount of enzyme, and adding a small percentage of organic solvent, it was possible to control all the parameters involved in the reaction. The excellent enatioselectivity of HLADH along with the DKR of arylpropionic aldehydes, allowed to obtain the corresponding alcohols in quantitative yields and with an optical purity ranging from 64% to >99%.

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It is known that massive black holes have a profound effect on the evolution of galaxies, and possibly on their formation by regulating the amount of gas available for the star formation. However, how black hole and galaxies communicate is still an open problem, depending on how much of the energy released interacts with the circumnuclear matter. In the last years, most studies of feedback have primarily focused on AGN jet/cavity systems in the most massive galaxy clusters. This thesis intends to investigate the feedback phenomena in radio--loud AGNs from a different perspective studying isolated radio galaxies, through high-resolution spectroscopy. In particular one NLRG and three BLRG are studied, searching for warm gas, both in emission and absorption, in the soft X-ray band. I show that the soft spectrum of 3C33 originates from gas photoionized by the central engine. I found for the first time WA in 3C382 and 3C390.3. I show that the observed warm emitter/absorbers is not uniform and probably located in the NLR. The detected WA is slow implying a mass outflow rate and kinetic luminosity always well below 1% the L(acc) as well as the P(jet). Finally the radio--loud properties are compared with those of type 1 RQ AGNs. A positive correlation is found between the mass outflow rate/kinetic luminosity, and the radio loudness. This seems to suggest that the presence of a radio source (the jet?) affects the distribution of the absorbing gas. Alternatively, if the gas distribution is similar in Seyferts and radio galaxies, the M(out) vs rl relation could simply indicate a major ejection of matter in the form of wind in powerful radio AGNs.