Sustainable chemical synthesis using singlet oxygen

This Thesis describes the use of photochemically generated singlet oxygen as an efficient, low waste oxidant for Greener chemical processing. Chapter 1 provides background on Green Chemistry and Process Chemistry. Strategies for improving the efficiency of multi-step chemical syntheses are discuss...

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Main Author: Miller, Samuel Jacob
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/48222/
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author Miller, Samuel Jacob
author_facet Miller, Samuel Jacob
author_sort Miller, Samuel Jacob
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This Thesis describes the use of photochemically generated singlet oxygen as an efficient, low waste oxidant for Greener chemical processing. Chapter 1 provides background on Green Chemistry and Process Chemistry. Strategies for improving the efficiency of multi-step chemical syntheses are discussed, including the use of continuous flow chemistry. Literature examples are given which highlight the process benefits of the examined strategies. A detailed review of singlet oxygen chemistry is also provided, focusing on the mechanism and synthetic utility of reactions of singlet oxygen with organic substrates. This Chapter also sets down the general aims for the work included in this Thesis. The first synthetic Chapter 2 centres on attempts to improve a pre-existing process for the synthesis of an important antimalarial compound artemisinin – one of the few examples of an industrial-scale application of singlet oxygen. Unusual aqueous solvent systems are assessed as a way to reduce the quantity of hazardous waste produced, and continuous flow chemistry is applied in an attempt to improve material throughput, all in an attempt to lower the cost and environmental impact of artemisinin production. Chapter 3 describes the development of direct monitoring techniques combining flow photochemistry and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy with a view to studying the mechanism of the artemisinin synthesis. Chapter 4 presents work towards the use of singlet oxygen in a concise, divergent synthesis of a novel family of natural products, the Glaciapyrrols. Several members of this family show therapeutic potential as anti-cancer agents. Singlet oxygen is assessed as an efficient way to install these compounds’ many oxygen-containing functional groups in a step economic manner. Finally, Chapter 5 provides experimental detail for the methods and Equipment used in this Thesis, and Chapter 6 considers the extent to which the Thesis aims have been fulfilled, placing the work herein within the wider context of Green Chemistry and Process Chemistry research.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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language English
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publishDate 2019
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spelling nottingham-482222025-02-28T13:56:15Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/48222/ Sustainable chemical synthesis using singlet oxygen Miller, Samuel Jacob This Thesis describes the use of photochemically generated singlet oxygen as an efficient, low waste oxidant for Greener chemical processing. Chapter 1 provides background on Green Chemistry and Process Chemistry. Strategies for improving the efficiency of multi-step chemical syntheses are discussed, including the use of continuous flow chemistry. Literature examples are given which highlight the process benefits of the examined strategies. A detailed review of singlet oxygen chemistry is also provided, focusing on the mechanism and synthetic utility of reactions of singlet oxygen with organic substrates. This Chapter also sets down the general aims for the work included in this Thesis. The first synthetic Chapter 2 centres on attempts to improve a pre-existing process for the synthesis of an important antimalarial compound artemisinin – one of the few examples of an industrial-scale application of singlet oxygen. Unusual aqueous solvent systems are assessed as a way to reduce the quantity of hazardous waste produced, and continuous flow chemistry is applied in an attempt to improve material throughput, all in an attempt to lower the cost and environmental impact of artemisinin production. Chapter 3 describes the development of direct monitoring techniques combining flow photochemistry and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy with a view to studying the mechanism of the artemisinin synthesis. Chapter 4 presents work towards the use of singlet oxygen in a concise, divergent synthesis of a novel family of natural products, the Glaciapyrrols. Several members of this family show therapeutic potential as anti-cancer agents. Singlet oxygen is assessed as an efficient way to install these compounds’ many oxygen-containing functional groups in a step economic manner. Finally, Chapter 5 provides experimental detail for the methods and Equipment used in this Thesis, and Chapter 6 considers the extent to which the Thesis aims have been fulfilled, placing the work herein within the wider context of Green Chemistry and Process Chemistry research. 2019-07-19 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/48222/1/Samuel%20J%20Miller%20Thesis%20%28Final%20Version%29.pdf Miller, Samuel Jacob (2019) Sustainable chemical synthesis using singlet oxygen. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. singlet oxygen sustainable photochemistry green artemisinin
spellingShingle singlet oxygen
sustainable
photochemistry
green
artemisinin
Miller, Samuel Jacob
Sustainable chemical synthesis using singlet oxygen
title Sustainable chemical synthesis using singlet oxygen
title_full Sustainable chemical synthesis using singlet oxygen
title_fullStr Sustainable chemical synthesis using singlet oxygen
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable chemical synthesis using singlet oxygen
title_short Sustainable chemical synthesis using singlet oxygen
title_sort sustainable chemical synthesis using singlet oxygen
topic singlet oxygen
sustainable
photochemistry
green
artemisinin
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/48222/