Non-covalent chiral catalysis in water

Scientists report the first example of Brønsted acid asymmetric catalysis in aqueous solution.

Water is an attractive reaction medium as it is cheap, clean, non-toxic and non-flammable. Also, its high heat capacity makes it ideally suited to exothermic reactions on an industrial scale. There are a number of reports of metal catalysed asymmetric reactions in the presence of water, as well as organocatalytic reactions involving covalent bonding, but until now a non-covalent, asymmetric organocatalytic reaction has remained elusive.

Magnus Rueping and Thomas Theissmann at Aachen University, Germany, performed enantioselective hydrogenation of quinolines using a chiral phosphoric acid catalyst in water. Phosphoric acid forms a hydrogen bond with the quinoline, and directs the dihydropridine hydride donor to a particular face.

This hydrogen-bonding catalysis occurs despite the fact that water is an excellent hydrogen donor, due to the phenomenon of ‘hydrophobic hydration’. Interaction between water molecules at the hydrophobic-hydrophilic interface causes the contact surface between water and substrate molecules to be minimised, reducing the possibility for water to participate in hydrogen-bonding, explains Rueping. The selectivity of the catalyst was further improved by adding bulky organic side chains that create a hydrophobic pocket for the substrate.

hydrophobic hydration

A hydrophobic site is created allowing catalysis to take place

Rueping says, ‘Non covalent asymmetric activation in aqueous solution has been considered impossible due to fast proton transfer in protic media. Our solution based on the principle of hydrophobic interaction allowed us to develop a Brønsted acid catalysed reaction in aqueous solution that provides the products in good yields and with excellent enantioselectivities.’

Peter Dalko from the Paris Descartes University in France says, ‘the discovery of the efficient reaction conditions is only part of the cake, since the rational behind the observed selectivity is also worth reflection. Hydrophobic interactions are well known in enzymology and are evoked to explain stereoselectivity in many enzymatic transformations. This concept is now emerging in chemistry as a major paradigm.’

Rueping is confident that it could be carried out on a larger scale. ‘Typically we use one equivalent of the dihydropyridine, but for large scale processes catalytic amounts of hydride donor would be used. Given that recycling of dihydroypyridines in water is already possible, the new Brønsted acid catalysed process in aqueous solution paves the way for large scale application.’

Jacob Bush

Read the full Chemical Science Edge article

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Clean energy from cobalt catalysts

Only a single metal centre is needed to catalyse the reduction of oxygen to produce water, opening the door to more efficient fuel cells in the future, say researchers in the US.

Converting solar energy to chemical energy using solar fuel cells and releasing stored energy from hydrogen fuel cells involves two key multielectron redox reactions – oxidising water to evolve oxygen and the reverse, reducing oxygen to water. It is the second reaction that limits the application of hydrogen fuel cells at the moment, as it generally requires expensive metal catalysts, such as platinum.

Cobalt porphyrin catalyst

Cobalt porphyrin catalyst could improve fuel cell technology

Nature achieves similar results in many different catalytic systems using metalloenzymes that contain bi- or multimetallic reaction sites, which has provided inspiration for development of bimetallic porphyrin catalysts. Now Daniel Nocera and colleagues at Massachusetts Institute of Technology have shown for the first time that single centre cobalt porphyrins anchored on carbon nanotubes can efficiently catalyse the reduction of oxygen, as long as they also contain a proton transfer group.

The positioning of the proton transfer group – in this case a carboxylic acid – the correct distance away from the cobalt is essential to stops the catalyst from partially reducing the oxygen, which is often a key problem in maintaining the efficiency of these reactions, explains Nocera.

Nocera’s porphyrins are much more efficient than existing cobalt catalysts and are made easily in two steps, so could invigorate the design of future fuel cells using cobalt over its more costly metal cousins.

Minhua Shao, an expert in fuel cell technologies at UTC Power in the US, believes that the results are ‘important to guide the design and development of non-precious metal electrocatalysts for oxygen reduction reaction in fuel cells’.

This is something Nocera is keen to develop, saying that he is now ‘focusing on improving the catalysts by lowering the amount of energy needed for the reaction’.

Jon Watson
 
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Chemical Science poster prize awarded at GRC Organic Reactions & Processes

Congratulations to Tyler Davis from Vanderbilt University, USA, who won the Chemical Science poster prize at the Gordon Research Conference on Organic Reactions and Processes held on 18-23 July at Bryant University, Rhode Island, USA.

Rodney Parsons, Tyler Davis, Joanne Thomson, Richard Hsung and Todd Nelson

From left to right: Rodney Parsons (vice chair), Tyler Davis (poster prize winner), Joanne Thomson (deputy editor, Chemical Science), Richard Hsung (chair) and Todd Nelson (vice chair)

Tyler was invited to give a short oral presentation on his work entitled ‘Chiral proton catalysis: Guidelines for the development of more reactive bifunctional catalysts, and the first enantioselective synthesis of chiral cis-4,5-disubstituted imidazolines’.

The conference marked its 57th consecutive year in existence, celebrating the diversity in organic chemistry. Topics included natural product total synthesis, method development, catalytic transformations and reaction mechanisms, with the speakers and audience reflecting the broad impact organic chemistry has had both in academia and industry.

Many thanks to the conference chair, Richard Hsung (University of Wisconsin), and vice chairs, Rodney Parsons (Bristol-Myers Squibb) and Todd Nelson (Merck & Co), for organising such a superb conference and helping to judge the posters.

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Bert Meijer wins Akzonobel Science Award

Many congratulations to Professor Bert Meijer, from Eindhoven University of Technology, who has been chosen as the winner of the AkzoNobel Science Award for 2010, for his outstanding contributions to advancing polymer and organic chemistry.
 
 
 
 
 
The AkzoNobel Science Awards are presented annually in recognition of outstanding scientific contributions by individuals in the fields of chemistry and materials science.

An independent panel of judges bestowed Meijer with this honour for his numerous achievements, including patented technology that led to the development of the first nano- container (also known as the dendritic box), and the synthesis and development of supramolecular polymers. Meijer was the first scientist to translate the idea of a supramolecular polymer into a viable product with polymer-like properties and resulted in a worldwide revolution in this branch of chemistry.

Followers of the RSC’s new flagship journal, Chemical Science, will also know that Meijer was the first person to publish work in the new journal. A rare accolade coincidentally shared with Meijer’s PhD supervisor Hans Wynberg, who authored the first ChemComm article more than 45 years ago! Why not take a look at the article, which is freely available to all.

Meijer is also a valued member of the ChemComm Editorial Advisory Board, and more recently he has been appointed to the Chemical Science International Editorial Advisory Board.

The ChemComm and Chemical Science team would like to take this opportunity to congratulate Bert on this fantastic achievement.

Have you got an exciting, high impact piece of work you would like to submit to Chemical Science?

Why not submit to Chemical Science today! 

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Final installment for ISACS 3

The 3rd and final International Conference on Advancing the Chemical Sciences (ISACS) got off to a blistering start in Hong Kong on Tuesday (20th), covering ‘Challenges in Inorganic and Materials Chemistry’.

 
 
 
 
 

ISACS 3 hosted in Hong Kong

Following the opening remarks given by the CEO of the RSC, Dr Richard Pike, distinguished Professor of Energy, Daniel Nocera (MIT), introduced the first session. Before introducing the speakers, Professor Nocera praised the new RSC journal, Chemical Science, and it’s flexible format commenting that this style had also been recently adopted by another leading general chemistry journal. Throughout the conference many of the speakers presented results published in Chemical Science.

After the Chair’s opening remarks, Professor Graetzel was introduced and presented on the latest developments in solar energy conversion systems. The energy theme was continued with the second talk, with Professor Jean-Marie Tarascon looking at how chemistry is driving the development of new electrode materials for lithium ion batteries. 

 
 
 

During the ISACS 3 talks

The quality of the science continued to impress, with presentations on main group chemistry (Power), single molecule magnets (Long), Carbene chemistry (Hillhouse) and multinuclear sandwich chemistry (Murahashi). Day one ended with a switch to bioinorganic chemistry, with Professor Chris Chang (UC Berkeley) wowing the audience with the latest cutting edge developments in the field of molecular imaging.

Day two continued where day one left off. Chemical Science Associate Editor, Professor Jeffrey Long, introduced two pioneers from the field of Metal-Organic Frameworks (MOFs), Professors Kitagawa and Yaghi. Professor Kitagawa spoke on coordination polymers with integrated functional pores whilst Professor Yaghi presented on ‘sequences’ and ‘codes’ in MOF chemistry. In the latter talk, and in line with the theme of the conference, Professor Yaghi outlined 5 key challenges from the field of MOF chemistry. The morning session closed with a truly impressive array of beautiful large structures from Professor Manfred Scheer (the role of polyphosphorus units in transition metal chemistry) and catalysis with butterflies from Professor Hans-Jorg Grutzmacher. 

 
 
 

ISACS 3 hosts welcoming the conference delegates to Hong Kong

As the audience broke for lunch the feeling was one of excitement for the remaining talks still to come from world leading inorganic researchers (Cummins, Che, Yam, Fujita, Yang, Nocera and Xu).

For any further details about the ISACS meetings or Chemical Science please visit our website.

Also watch this space for ISACS 4-6, due to be held in 2011, details will be announced shortly.

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ISACS 2 takes Budapest by storm

ISACS 2 is continuing where ISACS 1 left off – more world-class scientists discussing the very best in cutting edge chemistry. This time it’s the turn of physical chemistry and nanoscience, set in the beautiful city of Budapest.     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Joanne Thomson, Philip Earis and the ISACS 2 speakers

Moungi Bawendi opened the meeting with a fascinating talk on the science and technology of semiconductor nanocrystals, revealing that ‘it is all about the excitons.’ Hongkun Park then discussed his strategy for engineering light-matter interactions using nanoscale plasmonic and optoelectronic interfaces. Photochemistry was up next, with talks on methanol photodissociation on TiO2 surfaces and pi-sigma* excited states from Xueming Yang and Mike Ashfold. The afternoon talks covered electron transfer across interfaces (Martin Wolf), nanopatterning with molecules at interfaces (Steven De Feyter) and last but by no means least, nanoscale spectroscopy with optical antenna (Lukas Novotny). The day finished with a lively poster session and a members’ reception, where we welcomed many new members to the RSC.     

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Day two has been another jammed-packed event, with the morning covering single molecule optics for probing dynamics (Michel Orrit), single nano-objects spectroscopy (Vahid Sandoghdar), reactions of vibrationally excited molecules (Kopin Liu) and energy transfer at interfaces (Alec Wodtke). The afternoon session started on a more biophysical angle, with Toshio Yanagida discussing single molecule nanobioscience and Haw Yang talking about quantum dots as nanoscale local temperature sensors for measuring the temperature inside cells. The focus then switched to femto- and attosecond photoelectron experiments (Daniel Neumark) before David Clary closed the day’s session with his general procedure for predicting the kinetics and dynamics of polyatomic molecules. 

ISACS 3 is due to take place next week, 20th – 23rd July, in the spectacular venue of Hong Kong and will take a look at the challenges in inorganic and materials chemistry

 

 

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ISACS kicks off in style

The First International Symposium on Advancing the Chemical Sciences kicked off on Wednesday, focusing on challenges in organic chemistry and chemical biology. Set in the grand Fairment Hotel in central San Francisco, around 200 delegates were treated to a spectacular line up of plenary speakers covering a broad range of organic chemistry and chemical biology. Day one saw outstanding talks covering hydrogen-bonded catalysis (Jacobsen), iridium-catalysed asymmetric hydrogenation (Pfaltz), C-H oxidation (White), carbohydrate chemistry and biology (Seeberger, Hsieh-Wilson), rapid formation of molecular complexity (Sorensen) and the use of transition metal catalysis for the formation of pharmaceutically interesting compounds (Buchwald).
ISACS 1 Speakers
Robert Eagling, Editor, Chemical Science, and James Milne, Editorial Director, join the ISACS 1 speakers

Day two continued in an equally impressive fashion with further insights into new concepts in organocatalysis (MacMillan, Maruoka). After the break, the focus moved to chemical biology, with talks on activity-based proteomics (Cravatt) and reprogramming the code of life (Chin). There was a further shift in subject after lunch with molecular switches, motors and molecular recognition all covered (Feringa, Hunter). The second day ended with talks on new synthetic methods to lactones (Dong) and the latest developments in gold catalysis (Toste). 

David MacMillan

David MacMillan

Jason Chin discusses reprogramming the code of life

Jason Chin discusses reprogramming the code of life

There was plenty of high quality science on the final day, with cutting edge catalysis (Ooi) backed up by high quality chemical biology (Du Bois, Bertozzi).

The vibe at the conference was one of excitement and positivity. The Fairment hotel is a stunning venue and acted as the perfect back drop to the outstanding scientific talks. The new ISACS conferences have certainly arrived with a bang. Next stop Budapest

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