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Mechanistic Insights into the Appel Reaction Mediated by a Poly-Phosphamide Material as a Heterogeneous Catalyst.

Nidhi KumariAnup MahataBiswarup Chakraborty
Published in: Inorganic chemistry (2023)
Due to notable thermochemical stability, polyphosphamides are often regarded as flame retardants, while molecular phosphamides can serve as versatile Lewis base to catalyze diverse organic transformations. Being chemically analogous to phosphine oxide, phosphamide can also be considered as a mediator for the phosphine-mediated reaction. Herein, an amorphous polymeric material consisting of phosphamide (-NH-P(O)) in the repeating unit ( POP ) has been prepared via condensation of tris(2-aminoethyl)amine (TREN) and phenyl phosphinic dichloride (PPDC). The POP is isolated as a metal-free and pure organic material which is made of a strong covalent bond and the phosphamide unit is deployed in the organic framework. The presence of phosphamide in the repeating unit of the isolated amorphous POP material can be confirmed by 31 P CPMAS NMR, FTIR, and Raman studies. The core-level N 2p and P 2p X-ray photoelectron spectra are in accordance with the presence of tertiary amine nitrogen attached to carbon and secondary amine nitrogen attached to phosphorus. Elemental analyses have depicted approximately 19.7% of phosphorus content in the material, which is being utilized to study the catalytic Appel reaction with 76% conversion of alcohol to a corresponding halide and TON of 462. Quasi in situ Raman study has identified that amino phosphine formed via in situ reduction of the phosphamide unit of the POP catalyzes the halogenation of primary and secondary alcohols with wide substrate scope and functional group tolerance. Kinetic studies have established a first-order dependence with respect to alcohol, while deuterium labeling experiments emphasize that the deprotonation of alcohol is the rate-limiting step. High thermal stability of the material, scope of easy catalyst recyclability, and a cumulative TON of 1386 have led the POP as an emerging pure organic material to be explored further for other phosphine-mediated organocatalysis.
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