Journal Article10.1007/S00723-012-0419-5
Generating parahydrogen-induced polarization using immobilized iridium complexes in the gas-phase hydrogenation of carbon-carbon double and triple bonds
Ivan V. Skovpin,Ivan V. Skovpin,Vladimir V. Zhivonitko,Vladimir V. Zhivonitko,Robert Kaptein,Robert Kaptein,Igor V. Koptyug,Igor V. Koptyug +7 more
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TL;DR: In this article, immobilized iridium complexes synthesized using [Ir(COD)Cl]2 by anchoring on hydrous and anhydrous silica gels were studied in terms of generating parahydrogen-induced polarization (PHIP) in the gas-phase hydrogenation of propylene and propyne.
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Abstract: Immobilized iridium complexes synthesized using [Ir(COD)Cl]2 by anchoring on hydrous and anhydrous silica gels were studied in terms of generating parahydrogen-induced polarization (PHIP) in the gas-phase hydrogenation of propylene and propyne. Distinguishing differences in the hydrogenations of carbon–carbon double and triple bonds were found. It has been shown that in the double bond hydrogenation both catalysts are very active even at 25 °C. The reaction yield in continuous flow experiments is more than 70 %, whereas the obtained PHIP degrees are very low. In the case of the triple bond hydrogenation, a more or less active hydrogenation reaction was observed at relatively high temperatures (≈70–80 °C) for the catalyst immobilized on anhydrous silica, while the catalyst immobilized on hydrous silica was inactive at these temperatures. Contrary to the double bond hydrogenation, the triple bond hydrogenation provided significant signal enhancements observed in 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectra for the signals corresponding to protons of vinyl fragments of product propylene in both PASADENA and ALTADENA experiments. The catalyst, however, is not stable under the triple bond hydrogenation reaction conditions, and deactivates within several minutes. It was also found that at higher temperatures (100–120 °C), this catalyst demonstrates a reactivation most likely associated with the reduction of Ir(I) that results in the formation of Ir(0) surface metal nanoparticles.
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Citations
Parahydrogen-Based Hyperpolarization for Biomedicine
Jan-Bernd Hövener,Andrey N. Pravdivtsev,Bryce E. Kidd,C. Russell Bowers,Stefan Glöggler,Kirill V. Kovtunov,Markus Plaumann,Rachel Katz-Brull,K. Buckenmaier,Alexej Jerschow,Francesca Reineri,Thomas Theis,Roman V. Shchepin,Shawn Wagner,Pratip K. Bhattacharya,Niki M. Zacharias,Eduard Y. Chekmenev,Eduard Y. Chekmenev +17 more
TL;DR: Considerable progress has been made in the past decade in the area of pH2 -based hyperpolarization techniques for biomedical applications, covering the areas of spin physics, catalysis, instrumentation, preparation of the contrast agents, and applications.
299
Iridium(III) hydrido N-heterocyclic carbene-phosphine complexes as catalysts in magnetization transfer reactions
Marianna Fekete,Oliver W. Bayfield,Simon B. Duckett,Sam Hart,Ryan E. Mewis,Natalie E. Pridmore,Peter J. Rayner,Adrian C. Whitwood +7 more
TL;DR: It is shown that the ligand sphere of the polarization transfer catalyst itself becomes hyperpolarized and hence that the high-sensitivity detection of a number of reaction intermediates is possible and hydride ligand signals are shown to become visible through para-hydrogen-induced polarization rather than SABRE.
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Shaped Ceria Nanocrystals Catalyze Efficient and Selective Para-Hydrogen-Enhanced Polarization.
TL;DR: Ceria is also shown to be an efficient pairwise replacement catalyst for propene, indicating product formation predominantly by a non-pairwise addition.
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Parahydrogen-induced polarization by pairwise replacement catalysis on Pt and Ir nanoparticles
Ronghui Zhou,Evan Wenbo Zhao,Wei Cheng,Luke Neal,Haibin Zheng,Ryan E Quiñones,Helena E. Hagelin-Weaver,Clifford R. Bowers +7 more
TL;DR: PHIP by pairwise replacement has the potential to significantly diversify the substrates that can be hyperpolarized by PHIP for biomedical utilization and is revealed with the aid of density matrix spectral simulations.
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NMR Signal Enhancement for Hyperpolarized Fluids Continuously Generated in Hydrogenation Reactions with Parahydrogen
Danila A. Barskiy,Danila A. Barskiy,Oleg G. Salnikov,Oleg G. Salnikov,Kirill V. Kovtunov,Kirill V. Kovtunov,Igor V. Koptyug,Igor V. Koptyug +7 more
TL;DR: The approach developed for polarization analysis is useful for the optimization of experimental setup and reaction conditions to obtain maximum hyperpolarization for parahydrogen-based catalyst-free continuously generated fluids applicable in biomedical magnetic resonance imaging.
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