[reaction: see text] NaIO(4) oxidizes alkali metal halides efficiently in aqueous medium to halogenate alkenes and aromatics and produce the corresponding halo derivatives in excellent regio and stereoselectivity. The system also demonstrates the asymmetric version of bromo hydroxylation using beta-cyclodextrin complexes, resulting in moderate ee.
Microfluidics technology has emerged as a powerful tool for the radiosynthesis of positron emission tomography (PET) and single-photon emission computed tomography radiolabeled compounds. In this work, we have exploited a continuous flow microfluidic system (Advion, Inc., USA) for the [(18) F]-fluorine radiolabeling of the malonic acid derivative, [(18) F] 2-(5-fluoro-pentyl)-2-methyl malonic acid ([(18) F]-FPMA), also known as [(18) F]-ML-10, a radiotracer proposed as a potential apoptosis PET imaging agent. The radiosynthesis was developed using a new tosylated precursor. Radiofluorination was initially optimized by manual synthesis and served as a basis to optimize reaction parameters for the microfluidic radiosynthesis. Under optimized conditions, radio-thin-layer chromatography analysis showed 79% [(18) F]-fluorine incorporation prior to hydrolysis and purification. Following hydrolysis, the [(18) F]-FPMA was purified by C18 Sep-Pak, and the final product was analyzed by radio-HPLC (high-performance liquid chromatography). This resulted in a decay-corrected 60% radiochemical yield and ≥98% radiochemical purity. Biodistribution data demonstrated rapid blood clearance with less than 2% of intact [(18) F]-FPMA radioactivity remaining in the circulation 60 min post-injection. Most organs showed low accumulation of the radiotracer, and radioactivity was predominately cleared through kidneys (95% in 1 h). Radio-HPLC analysis of plasma and urine samples showed a stable radiotracer at least up to 60 min post-injection.
A matrix‐bound superoxide radical anion, generated by treating Ti(OR)4 (R=iPr, nBu) with H2O2, is a selective heterogeneous catalyst for the oxidation of anilines to the corresponding nitroarenes with 50 % aqueous H2O2 [Eq. (1)]. Yields of 82–98 % are obtained, even with anilines bearing electron‐withdrawing substituents (R=NO2, COOH).
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