Manuel A. Francisco
ExxonMobil
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Featured researches published by Manuel A. Francisco.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015
Ewa Nowicka; Meenakshisundaram Sankar; Robert Leyshon Jenkins; David W. Knight; David J. Willock; Graham J. Hutchings; Manuel A. Francisco; Stuart Hamilton Taylor
Ruthenium-ion-catalyzed oxidation of a range of alkylated polyaromatics has been studied. 2-Ethylnaphthalene was used as a model substrate, and oxidation can be performed in either a conventional biphasic or in a monophasic solvent system. In either case the reaction rates and product selectivity are identical. The reaction products indicate that the aromatic ring system is oxidized in preference to the alkyl chain. This analysis is possible due to the development of a quantitative NMR protocol to determine the relative amounts of aliphatic and aromatic protons. From a systematic set of substrates we show that as the length of the alkyl chain substituent on a polyaromatic increases, the proportion of products in which the chain remains attached to the aromatic system increases. Larger polyaromatic systems, based on pyrene and phenanthrene, show greater reactivity than those with fewer aromatic rings, and the alkyl chains are more stable to oxidation.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2018
Stuart Hamilton Taylor; Ewa Nowicka; Tomos J. Clarke; Meenakshisundaram Sankar; Robert Leyshon Jenkins; David W. Knight; Stanislaw E. Golunski; Graham J. Hutchings; David J. Willock; Manuel A. Francisco
Oxidation of aromatic hydrocarbons with differing numbers of fused aromatic rings (2-5), have been studied in two solvent environments (monophasic and biphasic) using ruthenium-ion-catalyzed oxidation (RICO). RICO reduces the aromaticity of the polyaromatic core of the molecule in a controlled manner by selective oxidative ring opening. Moreover, the nature of the solvent system determines the product type and distribution, for molecules with more than two aromatic rings. Competitive oxidation between substrates with different numbers of aromatic rings has been studied in detail. It was found that the rate of polyaromatic hydrocarbon oxidation increases with the number of fused aromatic rings. A similar trend was also identified for alkylated aromatic hydrocarbons. The proof-of-concept investigation provides new insight into selective oxidation chemistry for upgrading of polyaromatic molecules.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2018
Ewa Nowicka; Niamh W. Hickey; Meenakshisundaram Sankar; Robert Leyshon Jenkins; David W. Knight; David J. Willock; Graham J. Hutchings; Manuel A. Francisco; Stuart Hamilton Taylor
Ruthenium-ion-catalyzed oxidation (RICO) of polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) has been studied in detail using experimental and computational approaches to explore the reaction mechanism. DFT calculations show that regioselectivity in these reactions can be understood in terms of the preservation of aromaticity in the initial formation of a [3+2] metallocycle intermediate at the most-isolated double bond. We identify two competing pathways: C-C bond cleavage leading to a dialdehyde and C-H activation followed by H migration to the RuOx complex to give diketones. Experimentally, the oxidation of pyrene and phenanthrene has been carried out in monophasic and biphasic solvent systems. Our results show that diketones are the major product for both phenanthrene and pyrene substrates. These diketone products are shown to be stable under our reaction conditions so that higher oxidation products (acids and their derivatives) are assigned to the competing pathway through the dialdehyde. Experiments using 18 O-labelled water do show incorporation of oxygen from the solvents into products, but this may take place during the formation of the reactive RuO4 species rather than directly during PAH oxidation. When the oxidation of pyrene is carried out using D2 O, a kinetic isotope effect (KIE) is observed implying that water is involved in the rate-determining step leading to the diketone products.
Archive | 1997
Edward Ira Stiefel; Jonathan Martin Mcconnachie; Daniel P. Leta; Manuel A. Francisco; Catherine Louise Coyle; Peter John Guzi; Charles Frederick Pictroski
Archive | 1997
Daniella Maria Veronica Baxter; Catherine Louise Coyle; Kathleen Marie Creegan; Howard L. Fang; Manuel A. Francisco; Frederick Alastair Gibson; Roger Glyde; Peter John Guzi; Daniel P. Leta; Jonathan Martin Mcconnachie; Charles Frederick Pictroski; Edward Ira Stiefel; Velautha Cumaran Arunasalam
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1988
Kenneth D. Rose; Manuel A. Francisco
Tetrahedron | 2009
Alan R. Katritzky; Myong Sang Kim; Dmytro Fedoseyenko; Khalid Widyan; Mike Siskin; Manuel A. Francisco
Archive | 2008
Michael Siskin; Manuel A. Francisco; Rustom M. Billimoria
Archive | 1999
Manuel A. Francisco; Jason Zhisheng Gao; Kim Elizabeth Fyfe
Archive | 1997
Jeenok T. Kim; Paul Joseph Berlowitz; Manuel A. Francisco; Morton Beltzer