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Dive into the research topics where Juan A. Rincón is active.

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Featured researches published by Juan A. Rincón.


Organic Letters | 2014

Continuous Flow α-Trifluoromethylation of Ketones by Metal-Free Visible Light Photoredox Catalysis

David Cantillo; Óscar de Frutos; Juan A. Rincón; Carlos Mateos; C. Oliver Kappe

A continuous-flow, two-step procedure for the preparation of α-CF3-substituted carbonyl compounds has been developed. The carbonyl substrates were converted in situ into the corresponding silyl enol ethers, mixed with the CF3 radical source, and then irradiated with visible light using a flow reactor based on transparent tubing and a household compact fluorescent lamp. The continuous protocol uses Eosin Y as an inexpensive photoredox catalyst and requires only 20 min to complete the two reaction steps.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2014

A Continuous-Flow Protocol for Light-Induced Benzylic Fluorinations

David Cantillo; Óscar de Frutos; Juan A. Rincón; Carlos Mateos; C. Oliver Kappe

A continuous-flow protocol for the light-induced fluorination of benzylic compounds is presented. The procedure uses Selectfluor as the fluorine source and xanthone as an inexpensive and commercially available photoorganocatalyst. The flow photoreactor is based on transparent fluorinated ethylene propylene tubing and a household compact fluorescent lamp. The combination of xanthone with black-light irradiation results in very efficient fluorination. Good to excellent isolated yields were obtained for a variety of substrates bearing different functional groups applying residence times below 30 min.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2014

A Scalable Procedure for Light-Induced Benzylic Brominations in Continuous Flow

David Cantillo; Óscar de Frutos; Juan A. Rincón; Carlos Mateos; C. Oliver Kappe

A continuous-flow protocol for the bromination of benzylic compounds with N-bromosuccinimide (NBS) is presented. The radical reactions were activated with a readily available household compact fluorescent lamp (CFL) using a simple flow reactor design based on transparent fluorinated ethylene polymer (FEP) tubing. All of the reactions were carried out using acetonitrile as the solvent, thus avoiding hazardous chlorinated solvents such as CCl4. For each substrate, only 1.05 equiv of NBS was necessary to fully transform the benzylic starting material into the corresponding bromide. The general character of the procedure was demonstrated by brominating a diverse set of 19 substrates containing different functional groups. Good to excellent isolated yields were obtained in all cases. The novel flow protocol can be readily scaled to multigram quantities by operating the reactor for longer time periods (throughput 30 mmol h(-1)), which is not easily possible in batch photochemical reactors. The bromination protocol can also be performed with equal efficiency in a larger flow reactor utilizing a more powerful lamp. For the bromination of phenylacetone as a model, a productivity of 180 mmol h(-1) for the desired bromide was achieved.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Light‐Induced CH Arylation of (Hetero)arenes by In Situ Generated Diazo Anhydrides

David Cantillo; Carlos Mateos; Juan A. Rincón; Óscar de Frutos; C. Oliver Kappe

Diazo anhydrides (Ar-N=N-O-N=N-Ar) have been known since 1896 but have rarely been used in synthesis. This communication describes the development of a photochemical catalyst-free C-H arylation methodology for the preparation of bi(hetero)aryls by the one-pot reaction of anilines with tert-butyl nitrite and (hetero)arenes under neutral conditions. The key step in this procedure is the in situ formation and subsequent photochemical (>300u2005nm) homolytic cleavage of a transient diazo anhydride intermediate. The generated aryl radical then efficiently reacts with a (hetero)arene to form the desired bi(hetero)aryls producing only nitrogen, water, and tert-butanol as byproducts. The scope of the reaction for several substituted anilines and (hetero)arenes was investigated. A continuous-flow protocol increasing selectivity and safety has been developed enabling the experimentally straightforward preparation of a variety of substituted bi(hetero)aryls within 45u2005min of reaction time.


ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013

Discovery of a potent, dual serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor.

Nicolas Jacques Francois Dreyfus; Jason K. Myers; Valentina O. Badescu; Óscar de Frutos; María Luz de la Puente; Chunjin Ding; Sandra Ann Filla; Karsten Fynboe; Douglas Linn Gernert; Beverly A. Heinz; Susan K. Hemrick-Luecke; Kirk W. Johnson; Michael P. Johnson; Pilar López; Patrick L. Love; Laura J. Martin; Thierry Masquelin; Michael J. McCoy; Javier Mendiola; Denise Morrow; Mark A. Muhlhauser; Gustavo Pascual; Thomas J. Perun; Lance Allen Pfeifer; Lee A. Phebus; Simon James Richards; Juan A. Rincón; Eric P. Seest; Jikesh Shah; Jia Shaojuan

The objective of the described research effort was to identify a novel serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (SNRI) with improved norepinephrine transporter activity and acceptable metabolic stability and exhibiting minimal drug-drug interaction. We describe herein the discovery of a series of 3-substituted pyrrolidines, exemplified by compound 1. Compound 1 is a selective SNRI in vitro and in vivo, has favorable ADME properties, and retains inhibitory activity in the formalin model of pain behavior. Compound 1 thus represents a potential new probe to explore utility of SNRIs in central nervous system disorders, including chronic pain conditions.


Organic Letters | 2017

Electrochemical Deprotection of para-Methoxybenzyl Ethers in a Flow Electrolysis Cell

Robert A. Green; Katherine E. Jolley; Azzam A. M. Al-Hadedi; Derek Pletcher; David C. Harrowven; Óscar de Frutos; Carlos Mateos; David J. Klauber; Juan A. Rincón; Richard C. D. Brown

Electrochemical deprotection of p-methoxybenzyl (PMB) ethers was performed in an undivided electrochemical flow reactor in MeOH solution, leading to the unmasked alcohol and p-methoxybenzaldehyde dimethyl acetal as a byproduct. The electrochemical method removes the need for chemical oxidants, and added electrolyte (BF4NEt4) can be recovered and reused. The method was applied to 17 substrates with high conversions in a single pass, yields up to 92%, and up to 7.5 g h-1 productivity. The PMB protecting group was also selectively removed in the presence of some other common alcohol protecting groups.


Synlett | 2017

Rapid Continuous Ruthenium-Catalysed Transfer Hydrogenation of Aromatic Nitriles to Primary Amines

Ricardo Labes; Davir González-Calderón; Claudio Battilocchio; Carlos Mateos; Graham R. Cumming; Óscar de Frutos; Juan A. Rincón; Steven V. Ley

A continuous flow method for the selective reduction of aromatic nitriles to the corresponding amine is reported. The method is based on a ruthenium-catalysed transfer-hydrogenation process, requires no additives, and uses isopropanol as both solvent and reducing agent. The process utilizes 1 mol% of the commercially available [Ru( p -cymene)Cl 2 ] 2 , with a residence time of ca. 9 min, and a throughput of 50 mmol/h. The method was successfully applied to a range of aromatic nitriles providing the corresponding primary amines in good yields.


Archive | 2017

ESI from Rapid Continuous Ru-Catalysed Transfer Hydrogenation of Aromatic Nitriles to Primary Amines

Ricardo Labes; Claudio Battilocchio; Steven V. Ley; Carlos Mateos; Dg Calderón; Graham R. Cumming; Óscar de Frutos; Juan A. Rincón

Supplementary information for the working paper Rapid Continuous Ru-Catalysed Transfer Hydrogenation of Aromatic Nitriles to Primary Amines


Organic Process Research & Development | 2009

Preparation, Use, and Safety of O-Mesitylenesulfonylhydroxylamine

Javier Mendiola; Juan A. Rincón; Carlos Mateos; José F. Soriano; Óscar de Frutos; Jeffry K. Niemeier; Edward Mark Davis


Tetrahedron Letters | 2014

Green and scalable procedure for extremely fast ligandless Suzuki–Miyaura cross-coupling reactions in aqueous IPA using solid-supported Pd in continuous flow

Carlos Mateos; Juan A. Rincón; Beatriz Martín-Hidalgo; José Villanueva

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