Lipidic Mesophase-Embedded Palladium Nanoparticles: Synthesis and Tunable Catalysts in Suzuki-Miyaura Cross-Coupling Reactions.
Michael DussJijo J VallooranLivia Salvati ManniNicole KieligerStephan HandschinRaffaele MezzengaHenning Jacob JessenEhud M LandauPublished in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2018)
Lipidic cubic phases (LCPs) can reduce Pd2+ salts to palladium nanoparticles (PdNPs) of ∼5 nm size in their confined water channels under mild conditions. The resulting PdNP-containing LCPs were used as nanoreactor scaffolds to catalyze Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling reactions in the aqueous channels of the mesophase. To turn on catalysis, PdNP-containing LCPs were activated by swelling the aqueous channels of the lipidic framework, thereby enabling diffusion of the water-soluble substrates to the catalysts. The mesophases play a threefold role: they act as reducing agents for Pd2+, as limiting templates for their growth, and as support. The system was characterized and investigated by small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), cryo-transmission electron microscopy, dynamic light scattering, and nuclear magnetic resonance. Bulk LCPs and three dispersed palladium/lipid hybrid nanoparticle types were applied in the catalysis. The latter-liposomes, hexosomes, and cubosomes-can be obtained by design through combination of lipids and additives. The Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling of 5-iodo-2'-deoxyuridine and phenylboronic acid was used as a model reaction to study these systems. Bulk Pd-LCPs deliver the Suzuki-Miyaura product in 24 h in conversions up to 98% at room temperature, whereas with palladium/lipid dispersions at 40 °C, 68% of the starting material was transformed to the product after 72 h.
Keyphrases
- electron microscopy
- ionic liquid
- room temperature
- reduced graphene oxide
- water soluble
- magnetic resonance
- high resolution
- highly efficient
- fatty acid
- drug delivery
- gold nanoparticles
- photodynamic therapy
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- drug release
- transition metal
- contrast enhanced
- mass spectrometry
- walled carbon nanotubes
- monte carlo
- single molecule
- energy transfer