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Ionic-Liquid-Catalyzed Approaches under Metal-Free Conditions

Journal

ACCOUNTS OF CHEMICAL RESEARCH
Volume 54, Issue 16, Pages 3172-3190

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.1c00251

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21890761, 21533011, 21773266]
  2. Chinese Academy of Sciences [QYZDY-SSW-SLH013-2]

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Ionic liquids (ILs) offer promising metal-free catalysis by activating CO2 and other substrates to produce valuable chemicals under metal-free conditions. By designing task-specific ILs, it is possible to chemically capture and activate CO2, leading to the transformation of CO2 to various heterocycles and other chemicals without metal contamination. These IL-catalyzed processes display potential practical applications and can be beneficial for the production of value-added chemicals.
Metal-free catalysis is a promising protocol to access chemicals without metal contamination. Ionic liquids (ILs) that are entirely composed of organic cations and inorganic/organic anions have emerged as promising alternatives to molecular solvents and metal catalysts due to their unique properties such as structural tunability, the coexistence of multiple interactions among ions (e.g., electrostatic interaction, hydrogen bonding, van de Waals forces, acid/base interactions, hydrophilic/hydrophobic interactions, etc.), unique affinity for a wide range of chemicals, good chemical and thermal stability, and quite low volatility. ILs have shown potential applications in various chemical processes. In this Account, we systematically described our most recent work on IL-catalyzed approaches under metal-free conditions. The first section presents the IL-catalyzed strategies toward the transformation of CO2 to value-added chemicals, focusing on the CO2-reactive IL-catalyzed CO2 transformation to various heterocycles and the IL-catalyzed reductive transformation of CO2 to chemicals. In these approaches, we designed task-specific ILs that are able to chemically capture and activate CO2 via forming anion-based carbonate/carbamate or cation-based carboxylate/carbamate intermediates, thus further accomplishing its transformation to a series of heterocycles including quinazoline-2,4(1H,3H)-diones, cyclic carbonates, 2-oxazolidinones, oxazolones, and benzimidazolones under metal-free conditions. For the IL-catalyzed approaches to reducing CO2 with hydrosilanes to chemicals, we employed ILs capable of activating the Si-H bond in hydrosilanes and the N-H bond in amine substrates via H-bonding, thus achieving the reductive transformation of CO2 to formamides, benzimidazoles, and benzothiazoles via cooperative catalysis. The second section describes our finding on the IL-catalyzed hydration of the C C bond in propargylic alcohols. Azolate anion-based ILs that can chemically capture CO2 via the formation of carbamates could serve as robust nucleophiles to attack the C C bond in propargylic alcohols and then efficiently catalyze the hydration of propargylic alcohols to produce alpha-hydroxy ketones with the assistance of atmospheric CO2 gas under metal-free conditions. The third section unveils the cooperative catalysis strategy of hydrogen bond donors and acceptors of ILs for chemical reactions. In the hydrogen-bonding catalysis protocols, cations of the ILs act as H-bond donors and anions, as acceptors, forming H-bonds with the reactant molecules, respectively, in opposite ways, which can cooperatively catalyze the ring-closing C-O/C-O bond metathesis reactions of aliphatic diethers to O-heterocycles, the dehydrative etherification of alcohols to ethers, and direct oxidative esterification of alcohols to esters. We believe that these IL-catalyzed metal-free processes and strategies display promising practical applications, and their commercialization would bring great benefits to the production of the as-afforded value-added chemicals.

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