1. Anion–π Catalysis on Carbon Nanotubes.
- Author
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Bornhof, Anna‐Bea, Vázquez‐Nakagawa, Mikiko, Rodríguez‐Pérez, Laura, Ángeles Herranz, María, Sakai, Naomi, Martín, Nazario, Matile, Stefan, and López‐Andarias, Javier
- Subjects
CARBON nanotubes ,CATALYSIS ,HETEROGENEOUS catalysis ,ELECTRON tubes ,MULTIWALLED carbon nanotubes ,CATALYST supports - Abstract
Induced π acidity from polarizability is emerging as the most effective way to stabilize anionic transition states on aromatic π surfaces, that is, anion–π catalysis. To access extreme polarizability, we propose a shift from homogeneous toward heterogeneous anion–π catalysis on higher carbon allotropes. According to benchmark enolate addition chemistry, multi‐walled carbon nanotubes equipped with tertiary amine bases outperform single‐walled carbon nanotubes. This is consistent with the polarizability of the former not only along but also between the tubes. Inactivation by π‐basic aromatics and saturation with increasing catalyst concentration support that catalysis occurs on the π surface of the tubes. Increasing rate and selectivity of existing anion–π catalysts on the surface of unmodified nanotubes is consistent with transition‐state stabilization by electron sharing into the tubes, i.e. induced anion–π interactions. On pristine tubes, anion–π catalysis is realized by non‐covalent interfacing with π‐basic pyrenes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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