4.8 Article

Calcium carbide as a dehydrating agent for the synthesis of carbamates, glycerol carbonate, and cyclic carbonates from carbon dioxide

Journal

GREEN CHEMISTRY
Volume 22, Issue 13, Pages 4231-4239

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0gc01402h

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Funding

  1. New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO) [JPNP16010]

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Carbon dioxide (CO2) is a nontoxic and inexpensive C1 building block, which can be used for the synthesis of valuable chemicals such as aromatic carbamates from anilines and methanol (MeOH), glycerol carbonate from glycerol, and cyclic carbonates from diols. However, these reactions generate water as the byproduct and suffer from thermodynamic limits, which lead to low yields. Calcium carbide (CaC2) is a renewable chemical, which can be recycled from calcium that is abundant in the Earth's crust. Furthermore, CaC(2)rapidly reacts with water. In this work, we used CaC(2)as a dehydrating agent for the direct synthesis of carbamates (including polyurethane precursors) from amines, CO2, and MeOH. All reagents were commercially available. In addition, CaC(2)was employed for the synthesis of glycerol carbonate from glycerol and CO(2)with a zinc catalyst and N-donor ligand. A similar protocol was applied to synthesize cyclic carbonates from diols and CO2.

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