Publication | Open Access
NaOH‐Promoted Hydrogen Transfer: Does NaOH or Traces of Transition Metals Catalyze the Reaction?
110
Citations
24
References
2009
Year
EngineeringCommercial NaohOrganic ChemistryChemistryCatalyst ActivationHydrogen GenerationChemical EngineeringHydrogen TransferHomogeneous CatalysisAbstract NaohIndustrial CatalysisCatalysisHydrogenDoes NaohCatalytic SynthesisTransition MetalsTransition Metals CatalyzeHeterogeneous CatalysisMolecular Catalysis
Abstract NaOH is revealed as an excellent catalyst for the hydrogen transfer of a wide range of aromatic and aliphatic ketones, which can be converted in high yields into the corresponding alcohols. The method is simple, cheap, uses a nontoxic and easy‐to‐handle catalyst, and does not require strictly anhydrous reagents, an inert atmosphere, transition metals, or any additional ligands. The pathway of this reaction is still debatable: is it a Meerwein–Ponndorf–Verley‐like process or are traces of transition metals present in commercial NaOH responsible for the activity? Possible mechanisms of this surprising reaction are discussed.
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