719 resultados para toluene hydrogenation
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ABSTRACT: Hydrogenation of passion fruit (passiflora edulis) seed oil was carried out with a commercial nickel/silica catalyst under different experimental conditions. The influence of reaction parameters (reaction temperature, hydrogen pressure, amount of catalyst, agitation rate and reaction time) on the response variable (iodine value) was studied using a central composite rotatable design and six center points for replication. Under the experimental conditions used, the model response equations for the iodine value showed good agreement with the experimental results.
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Wet impregnation of pre-synthesized surfactant-stabilized aqueous rhodium (0) colloidal suspension on silica was employed in order to prepare supported Rh-0 nanoparticles of well-defined composition, morphology and size. A magnetic core-shell support of silica (Fe(3)O4@SiO2) was used to increase the handling properties of the obtained nanoheterogeneous catalyst. The nanocomposite catalyst Fe3O4@SiO2-Rh-0 NPs was highly active in the solventless hydrogenation of model olefins and aromatic substrates under mild conditions with turnover frequencies up to 143,000 h(-1). The catalyst was characterized by various transmission electron microscopy techniques showing well-dispersed rhodium nanoparticles (similar to 3 nm) mainly located at the periphery of the silica coating. The heterogeneous magnetite-supported nanocatalyst was investigated in the hydrogenation of cyclohexene and compared to the previous surfactant-stabilized aqueous Rh-0 colloidal suspension and various silica-supported Rh-0 nanoparticles. Finally, the composite catalyst could be reused in several runs after magnetic separation. (C) 2011 Elsevier B. V. All rights reserved.
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We performed laboratory experiments to investigate the sensitivity of the Spectral Induced Polarization (SIP) method to toluene contamination in clayey soils. We used mixtures of quartzitic sand and montmorillonite as soil samples, artificially contaminated with varying amounts of toluene. Care was taken to quantify the experimental uncertainty resulting from packing since such effects must be quantified if variations in SIP signatures between samples are to be reliably interpreted in terms of the effects of hydrocarbon concentration. The SIP response of all samples following addition of toluene was monitored for a period of 40 days following sample preparation. Stepwise regression was used to examine the statistical significance of correlations between (i) clay content and (ii) toluene concentration and SIP parameters. Both single-frequency real and imaginary conductivity measurements, along with the integral chargeability, normalized chargeability, DC conductivity and time constant obtained from a Debye decomposition fitting, were examined in this regression analysis. The SIP measurements show a clear time dependence following sample preparation, indicating that samples containing toluene may take significant time to reach an equilibrium electrical response. SIP measurements are significantly related to toluene content shortly after sample preparation, when the expected dependence of SIP on clay concentration is apparently suppressed. However, for the state of electrical equilibrium after 40 days (interpreted to indicate surface chemistry at equilibrium) there is no significant relation between SIP measurements and toluene content; instead SIP measurements are then significantly correlated with clay concentration. The total chargeability, normalized chargeability and relaxation time obtained from the Debye decomposition show no correlation with toluene content, indicating that this procedure, which likely integrates over multiple mechanisms, may not be suitable for understanding relationships between SIP and hydrocarbon contamination. We find only small low-frequency polarization signals observed in relation to toluene concentration (2 mrad at 0.01 Hz), which initially decreases the interfacial polarization. Unlike earlier works, our results do not support the use of the SIP method as a tool for monitoring toluene contamination in clay soils.
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Toluene is an organic solvent used in numerous processes and products, including industrial paints. Toluene neurotoxicity and reproductive toxicity are well recognized: however, its genotoxicity is still under discussion, and toluene is not classified as a carcinogenic solvent. Using the comet assay and the micronucleus test for detection of possible genotoxic effects of toluene, we monitored industrial painters from Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. The putative involvement of oxidative stress in genetic damage and the influences of age, smoking, alcohol consumption, and exposure time were also assessed. Although all biomarkers of toluene exposure were below the biological exposure limits, painters presented significantly higher DNA damage (comet assay) than the control group; however, in the micronucleus assay, no significant difference was observed. Painters also showed alterations in hepatic enzymes and albumin levels, as well as oxidative damage, suggesting the involvement of oxidative stress. According to multiple linear regression analysis, blood toluene levels may account for the increased DNA damage in painters. In summary, this study showed that low levels of toluene exposure can cause genetic damage, and this is related to oxidative stress, age, and time of exposure. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Il presente lavoro di tesi è frutto di una collaborazione fra il Dipartimento di Chimica Fisica ed Inorganica (gruppo del Prof. Valerio Zanotti – Mattia Vaccari, Dr. Rita Mazzoni) ed il Dipartimento di Chimica Industriale e dei Materiali (gruppo del Prof. Angelo Vaccari – Dr. Thomas Pasini, Dr. Stefania Albonetti, Prof. Fabrizio Cavani) e si inserisce il un progetto volto a valutare l’attività e la selettività del catalizzatore di idrogenazione di Shvo 1, verso l’idrogenazione selettiva del doppio legame polare del 5-idrossimetilfurfurale (HMF) in fase omogenea. L’HMF è un composto di natura organica facilmente ottenibile dalle biomasse, il quale può essere impiegato come building block per ottenere prodotti ad alto valore aggiunto per la chimica fine o additivi per biocarburanti aventi un elevato potere calorifico. In particolare la nostra attenzione si è rivolta alla produzione del 2,5-diidrossimetilfurano (BHMF), un importante building block per la produzione di polimeri e schiume poliuretaniche. Il lavoro di tesi da me svolto ha riguardato la messa a punto di una nuova metodologia sintetica per la preparazione del catalizzatore di Shvo e lo studio della sua attività catalitica nella riduzione di HMF a BHMF. Il comportamento del catalizzatore è stato monitorato studiando la resa in BHMF in funzione di tutti i parametri di reazione: temperatura, pressione di H2, solvente, rapporto molare substrato/catalizzatore, concentrazione, tempo. Successivamente è stata valutata la possibilità di riciclare il catalizzatore recuperando il prodotto di estrazione con acqua, per precipitazione o eseguendo la reazione in miscela bifasica (toluene/H2O). The present work is a collaboration between the Department of Physics and Inorganic Chemistry (group of Prof. Valerio Zanotti - Mattia Vaccari, Dr. Rita Mazzoni) and the Department of Industrial Chemistry and Materials (Group of Prof. Angelo Vaccari - Dr. Thomas Pasini, Dr. Stefania Albonetti, Prof. Fabrizio Cavani), and it’s a project devoted to evaluate the activity and selectivity of the Shvo catalyst, in the selective hydrogenation of polar double bond of 5 -hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF) in homogeneous phase. The HMF is an organic compound easily obtained from biomass, which can be used as a building block for fine chemicals abd polymer production or additives for biofuels with a high calorific value. In particular, our attention turned to the production of 2.5-bishydroxymethylfuran (BHMF), an important building block for the production of polymers and polyurethane foams. This thesis has involved the development of a new synthetic methodology for the preparation of Shvo’s catalyst and the study of its catalytic activity in the reduction of HMF to BHMF. The behavior of the catalyst was monitored by studying the yield in BHMF as a function of all the reaction parameters: temperature, pressure of H2, solvent, substrate to catalyst molar ratio, concentration, time. Subsequently it was evaluated the possibility of recycling the catalyst recovering the product of extraction with water, by precipitation or performing the reaction in biphasic mixture (toluene/H2O).
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Von aromatischen Aldehyden abgeleitete α-Aminonitrile können ohne die Anwendung von Schutzgruppen in α-Position deprotoniert werden, wenn keine lithiumhaltigen Basen verwendet werden. Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit war es, die Reaktionen deprotonierter α-Aminonitrile mit Elektrophilen zu untersuchen. Die Addition von α-Aminocarbanionen an Imine führt unter intramolekularer Eliminierung von HCN zu Endiaminen, die sich in einer Eintopfsynthese abhängig von der Aufarbeitung in 1,2-Diamine oder 1,2-Diimine umwandeln lassen. Die nach Oxidation durch Luftsauerstoff erhaltenen Diimine können mit dem Reduktionsmittel BH3·THF diastereoselektiv reduziert werden. Es hat sich hier gezeigt, dass durch Zugabe einer katalytischen Menge an NaBH4 hauptsächlich die syn-Diamine erhalten werden, der Zusatz von Phthalsäure wiederum liefert bevorzugt die anti-Produkte. In beiden Fällen wird das Produkt in quantitativer Ausbeute erhalten. So konnte also eine effektive diastereoselektive Reduktionsmethode entwickelt werden, die eine freie Wahl der syn- oder anti-Konfiguration ermöglicht. Um enantiomerenreine 1,2-Diamine zu erhalten, wurden verschiedene Methoden getestet. Sowohl auxiliargesteuerte Synthesen mit einem N-Glycosyl-Aminonitril oder mit chiralen Sulfinyliminen als auch die Reduktion durch chirale Borverbindungen (CBS-Katalysatoren, Triacyloxyborhydrid oder Diisopinocamphenylboran), Transferhydrierungen mit chiralen Difluortitanocen-, Noyori- oder Organophosphat-Katalysatoren sowie enantioselektive Hydrierungen mit chiralen Übergangsmetall-katalysatoren waren jedoch nicht erfolgreich. Die Umsetzung der 1,2-Diimine mit Chlormethylethern oder -estern liefert die entsprechenden unsymmetrischen Imidazoliumsalze. Diese konnten zu N-heterocyclischen Carbenen deprotoniert und erfolgreich als Liganden in Suzuki- und Heck-Reaktionen eingesetzt werden. Durch die 1,2-Addition α-deprotonierter Streckerprodukte und anschließende Reduktion im Eintopfverfahren konnten 1,2-Aminoalkohole in mäßigen bis guten Ausbeuten dargestellt werden. Die Umsetzung von α-Aminocarbanionen mit N-Acyliminen erlaubt zudem die Synthese tetrasubstituierter Imidazole und trisubstituierter Oxazole in drei beziehungsweise vier Stufen: Die zunächst gebildeten α-Amino-α-acylaminopropionitrile können isoliert und in Gegenwart von Base einer Retro-Strecker-Reaktion unterworfen werden. Abhängig vom Substitutionsmuster schließt sich in manchen Fällen nach der Eliminierung von HCN direkt die Cyclisierung zum Imidazol an. Nicht cyclisierte Intermediate lassen sich durch Dehydratisierung mit PCl5 zu Imidazolen umsetzen, aber auch unter sauren Bedingungen zu α-Acylaminoketonen hydrolysieren, welche wiederum durch Einwirkung von PCl5 in Oxazole überführt werden können. Auf diese Weise wurden Imidazole und Oxazole in moderaten bis hohen Gesamtausbeuten hergestellt.
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The importance of the β-amino nitroalkanes is due to their high versatility allowing a straightforward entry to a variety of nitrogen-containing chiral building blocks; furthermore obtaining them in enantiopure form allows their use in the synthesis of biologically active compounds or their utilization as chiral ligands for different uses. In this work, a reaction for obtaining enantiopure β-amino nitroalkanes through asymmetric organocatalysis has been developed. The synthetic strategy adopted for the obtainment of these compounds was based on an asymmetric reduction of β-amino nitroolefins in a transfer hydrogenation reaction, involving an Hantzsch ester as hydrogen source and a chiral thiourea as organic catalyst. After the optimization of the reaction conditions over the β-acyl-amino nitrostyrene, we tested the reaction generality over other aromatic compound and for Boc protected substrate both aromatic and aliphatic. A scale-up of the reaction was also performed.
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A reference material for the biological monitoring of occupational exposure to toluene, benzene and phenol was prepared. O-cresol and hippuric acid (metabolites of toluene) are used for the biological monitoring of occupational exposure to toluene. Phenol, a metabolite of benzene, is used for the biological monitoring of exposure to benzene, but phenol can of course also be used as an indicator of exposure to phenol as well. The reference material (RM) used for the determination of these metabolites was prepared by freeze-drying pooled urine samples obtained from healthy persons occupationally exposed to toluene and those taking part in an inhalation experiment. Tests for homogeneity and stability were performed by determining urine concentrations of o-cresol, hippuric acid, creatinine and phenol. To investigate the stability of the RM, the urinary concentrations of o-cresol and phenol were monitored for eighteen months using GC and HPLC, while those of hippuric acid and creatinine were followed for five and six years, respectively, using HPLC. Analysis of variance showed that the concentrations did not change. The certified concentration values (and their uncertainties) of the substances in this reference material (phenol concentration c=6.46+/-0.58 mg l(-1); o-cresol concentration c=1.17+/-0.15 mg l(-1); hippuric acid concentration c=1328+/-30 mg l(-1); creatinine concentration c=0.82+/-0.10 g l(-1)) were evaluated via the interactive statistical programme IPECA.
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The Pd-C-assisted hydrogenolysis of substituted 3-(2-nitrophenyl)-isoxazoles, irrespective of substitution on the isoxa-zole ring, invariably leads to reduction of nitro to amino group with concomitant regiospecific ring closure to yield substituted 4-quinolinamines. In contrast similar hydrogenation of 3-(nitro substituted phenyl)-2-isoxazolines results in reduction of the nitro group only with conservation of isoxazoline ring to yield 3-(amino substituted phenyl)-2-isoxazolines.
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Results of the catalytic hydrogenation of Baylis-Hillman adducts obtained from substituted 3-, 4- and 5-isoxazolecarbox-aldehydes and their corresponding acetates in the presence of Raney-Ni and Pd-C are presented. The hydrogenation of Baylis-Hillman adducts of substituted 5-isoxazolecarbaldehydes and 3-isoxazolecarbaldehydes in the presence of Raney-Ni furnishes diastereoselectively syn enaminones over anti and in the presence of boric acid as an additive further enhancement of diastereoselectivity in favor of syn isomer is observed. The Pd-C-promoted hydrogenation of these substrates is also diastereoselective in favor of syn isomer but occurs without the hydrogenolysis of isoxazole-ring. The presence of boric acid as additive in this hydrogenation exhibits no pronounced effect on diastereoselectivity. The Raney-Ni-mediated hydrogenation of Baylis-Hillman adducts of substituted 4-isoxazolecarbaldehydes yield pyridone derivatives and Pd-C-promoted hydrogenation of the same substrate is diastereoselective to afford the anti isomer of the resulting products. The enaminones derived from Baylis-Hillman adducts of 3- and 5-isoxazolecarbaldehydes serve as versatile precursors for '-hydroxy-1, 3-diketones, which undergo acid-catalyzed ring-closure reaction to afford the furanone derivatives in excellent yields
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The first few low-lying spin states of alternant polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) molecules of several shapes showing defect states induced by contour hydrogenation have been studied both by ab initio methods and by a precise numerical solution of Pariser-Parr-Pople (PPP) interacting model. In accordance with Lieb's theorem, the ground state shows a spin multiplicity equal to one for balanced molecules, and it gets larger values for imbalanced molecules (that is, when the number of π electrons on both subsets is not equal). Furthermore, we find a systematic decrease of the singlet-triplet splitting as a function of the distance between defects, regardless of whether the ground state is singlet or triplet. For example, a splitting smaller than 0.001 eV is obtained for a medium size C46H28 PAH molecule (di-hydrogenated [11]phenacene) showing a singlet ground state. We conclude that π electrons unbound by lattice defects tend to remain localized and unpaired even when long-range Coulomb interaction is taken into account. Therefore they show a biradical character (polyradical character for more than two defects) and should be studied as two or more local doublets. The implications for electron transport are potentially important since these unpaired electrons can trap traveling electrons or simply flip their spin at a very small energy cost.
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Some chiral β-amino alcohols have been evaluated as potential ligands for the ruthenium-catalyzed asymmetric transfer hydrogenation (ATH) of N-phosphinyl ketimines in isopropyl alcohol. The ruthenium complex prepared from [RuCl2(p-cymene)]2 and (1S,2R)-1-amino-2-indanol has shown to be an efficient catalyst for the ATH of several N-(diphenylphosphinyl)imines, affording the reduction products in very good isolated yields and enantiomeric excesses up to 82%. The inherent rigidity of the indane ring system present in the ligand seems to be very important to achieve good enantioselectivities.
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Palladium, platinum, and ruthenium supported on activated carbon were used as catalysts for the selective hydrogenation of 1-heptyne, a terminal alkyne. All catalysts were characterized by temperature programmed reduction, X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. TPR and XPS suggest that the metal in all catalysts is reduced after the pretreatment with H2 at 673 K. The TPR trace of the PdNRX catalyst shows that the support surface groups are greatly modified as a consequence of the use of HNO3 during the catalyst preparation. During the hydrogenation of 1-heptyne, both palladium catalysts were more active and selective than the platinum and ruthenium catalysts. The activity order of the catalysts is as follows: PdClRX > PdNRX > PtClRX ≫ RuClRX. This superior performance of PdClRX was attributed in part to the total occupancy of the d electronic levels of the Pd metal that is supposed to promote the rupture of the H2 bond during the hydrogenation reaction. The activity differences between PdClRX and PdNRX catalysts could be attributed to a better accessibility of the substrate to the active sites, as a consequence of steric and electronic effects of the superficial support groups. The order for the selectivity to 1-heptene is as follows: PdClRX = PdNRX > RuClRX > PtClRX, and it can be mainly attributed to thermodynamic effects.
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This paper complements a previous one [1] about toluene adsorption on a commercial spherical activated carbon and on samples obtained from it by CO2 or steam activation. The present paper deals with the activation of a commercial spherical carbon (SC) having low porosity and high bed density (0.85 g/cm3) using the same procedure. Our results show that SC can be well activated with CO2 or steam. The increase in the burn-off percentage leads to an increase in the gravimetric adsorption capacity (more intensively for CO2) and a decrease in bed density (more intensively for CO2). However, for similar porosity developments similar bed densities are achieved for CO2 and steam. Especial attention is paid to differences between both activating agents, comparing samples having similar or different activation rates, showing that CO2 generates more narrow porosity and penetrates more inside the spherical particles than steam. Steam activates more from the outside to the interior of the spheres and hence produces larger spheres size reductions. With both activation agents and with a suitable combination of porosity development and bed density, quite high volumetric adsorption values of toluene (up to 236 g toluene/L) can be obtained even using a low toluene concentration (200 ppmv).
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We thank the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (MICINN; grant no. CONSOLIDER INGENIO 2010-CSD2007-00006, CTQ2007-65218 and CTQ11-24151), the Generalitat Valenciana (Grant No. PROMETEO/2009/039 and FEDER), and the University of Alicante for generous and continuous financial support, as well as MEDALCHEMY S.L. for a gift of chemicals. O. P. thanks the Spanish Ministerio de Educación for a predoctoral fellowship (Grant no. AP-2008-00989).