SummaryA home-built microreactor system for light-mediated biphasic gas/liquid reactions was assembled from simple commercial components. This paper describes in full detail the nature and function of the required building elements, the assembly of parts, and the tuning and interdependencies of the most important reactor and reaction parameters. Unlike many commercial thin-film and microchannel reactors, the described set-up operates residence times of up to 30 min which cover the typical rates of many organic reactions. The tubular microreactor was successfully applied to the photooxygenation of hydrocarbons (Schenck ene reaction). Major emphasis was laid on the realization of a constant and highly reproducible gas/liquid slug flow and the effective illumination by an appropriate light source. The optimized set of conditions enabled the shortening of reaction times by more than 99% with equal chemoselectivities. The modular home-made flow reactor can serve as a prototype model for the continuous operation of various other reactions at light/liquid/gas interfaces in student, research, and industrial laboratories.
The photo-oxygenation of versatile arylcycloalkenes proceeds through zwitterionic intermediates and provides access to new allyl hydroperoxides and endoperoxides.
Structurally diverse carbocycles with two vicinal nitrogen-substituents were prepared in expedient three-component reactions from simple amines, aldehydes, and nitroalkenes. trans,trans-6-Nitrocyclohex-2-enyl amines were obtained in a one-pot domino reaction involving condensation, tautomerisation, conjugate addition, and nitro-Mannich cyclisation. Upon employment of less nucleophilic carboxamides, a concerted Diels-Alder cycloaddition mechanism operated to give the corresponding cis,trans-nitrocyclohexenyl amides. Both types of substituted carbocycles offer ample opportunities for chemical manipulations at the core and periphery. Ring oxidation with MnO2 affords substituted nitroarenes. Reduction with Zn/HCl provides access to various trans- and cis-diaminocyclohexenes, respectively, in a straight-forward manner. With enantiopure secondary amines, a two-step synthesis of chiral nitrocyclohexadienes was developed (82-94% ee).
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