Sustainable amine production through hydrogenation of amides under mild conditions

Sustainable amine production through hydrogenation of amides under mild conditions
Figure 1: Amine production through amide-hydrogenation. Credit: Osaka University

Osaka University group demonstrates a catalyst that effectively converts amides to amines at low temperature under low hydrogen pressure

Amines are vital in nature; for example, amino acids—the building blocks of proteins and thus fundamental to life—are . Numerous materials including pharmaceuticals, dyes, polymers, and solvents are amines. Thus, amines are important targets in chemical synthesis. The formation of amines from amides is of great interest. There are numerous amides that are widely available and inexpensive, making them attractive substrates for conversion to amines. However, amides are very stable, which makes their conversion to amines difficult. Typical approaches to convert amides to amines require metal reagents, which generate metal waste, or have poor efficiency.

Direct formation of amines from amides through is desirable because water should be the only by-product. However, harsh are required for this conversion. The development of catalysts that allow the amide hydrogenation reaction to be performed under mild conditions is a goal of numerous chemists because it is important for sustainable pharmaceutical production.

Sustainable amine production through hydrogenation of amides under mild conditions
Figure 2: a) Platinum-vanadium bimetallic nanoparticle catalyst, b) Image of platinum-vanadium bimetallic nanoparticle catalyst (white dots are platinum-vanadium bimetallic nanoparticles) through scanning electron microscope. Credit: Osaka University

Osaka University researchers have recently developed a for amide hydrogenation that operates under mild conditions. This has numerous favorable features, including the ability to be isolated and reused, high selectivity, and most importantly, it catalyzes amide conversion to amines at just 70 °C and a hydrogen pressure of 30 bar. The catalyst was also able to effectively promote amine formation at room temperature or a hydrogen pressure of 1 bar, representing the first example of amide hydrogen at ambient pressure or temperature. The team then investigated the substrate scope and recyclability of the catalyst. The catalyst was able to convert various amides to target amines in high yield and displayed no loss of activity after being recycled ten times.

"We initially surveyed the activity of various bimetallic nanoparticle catalysts in amide hydrogenation," says first author Takato Mitsudome. "Our results revealed that the combination of platinum and vanadium is a key role for amine production under mild conditions."

 "This is the first catalyst to allow green production of amines from amides under easily achievable conditions," says team leader Kiyotomi Kaneda.

This catalyst effective for sustainable amide hydrogenation under mild conditions will facilitate access to amines, which are important materials used in applications ranging from drugs to electronics.

More information: Takato Mitsudome et al. Mild Hydrogenation of Amides to Amines over a Platinum-Vanadium Bimetallic Catalyst, Angewandte Chemie International Edition (2017). DOI: 10.1002/anie.201704199

Provided by Osaka University

Citation: Sustainable amine production through hydrogenation of amides under mild conditions (2017, July 10) retrieved 28 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2017-07-sustainable-amine-production-hydrogenation-amides.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Researchers break down plastic waste

12 shares

Feedback to editors