Michael R. Chapman
University of Leeds
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Publication
Featured researches published by Michael R. Chapman.
Green Chemistry | 2016
Michael R. Chapman; Maria H. T. Kwan; Georgina King; Benjamin A. Kyffin; A. John Blacker; Charlotte E. Willans; Bao N. Nguyen
A novel, rapid and efficient route to imidazo[1,2-a]pyridines under ambient, aqueous and metal-free conditions is reported. The NaOH-promoted cycloisomerisations of N-propargylpyridiniums give quantitative yield in a few minutes (10 g scale). A comparison of common green metrics to current routes showed clear improvements, with at least a one order of magnitude increase in space-time-yield.
ChemInform | 2015
Benjamin R. M. Lake; Michael R. Chapman; Charlotte E. Willans
Since their isolation in 1991, N-heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) have become ubiquitous in organometallic chemistry and catalysis. In recent years, metal–NHC complexes are also showing significant promise in biomedicine, with the development of highly efficient metal-based drugs for potential application in cancer therapeutics or infectious disease. Many studies have shown that NHC ligands do not always remain innocent, and can themselves undergo unanticipated reactions at the metal centre. This review provides an account of the fascinating reactivity of NHCs at transition metal centres.
Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2018
Katherine E. Jolley; Michael R. Chapman; A. John Blacker
Chloramines are an important class of reagents, providing a convenient source of chlorine or electrophilic nitrogen. However, the instability of these compounds is a problem which makes their isolation and handling difficult. To overcome these hazards, a continuous-flow approach is reported which generates and immediately reacts N-chloramines directly, avoiding purification and isolation steps. 2-Chloramines were produced from the reaction of styrenes with N-alkyl-N-sulfonyl-N-chloramines, whilst N-alkyl or N,N’-dialkyl-N-chloramines reacted with anisaldehyde in the presence of t-BuO2H oxidant to afford amides. Primary and secondary imines were produced under continuous conditions from the reaction of N-chloramines with base, with one example subsequently reduced under asymmetric conditions to produce a chiral amine in 94% ee.
Angewandte Chemie | 2018
Michael R. Chapman; Sebastian C. Cosgrove; Nicholas J. Turner; Nikil Kapur; A. John Blacker
We report a simple, mild, and synthetically clean approach to accelerate the rate of enzymatic oxidation reactions by a factor of up to 100 when compared to conventional batch gas/liquid systems. Biocatalytic decomposition of H2 O2 is used to produce a soluble source of O2 directly in reaction media, thereby enabling the concentration of aqueous O2 to be increased beyond equilibrium solubility under safe and practical conditions. To best exploit this method, a novel flow reactor was developed to maximize productivity (g product L-1 h-1 ). This scalable benchtop method provides a distinct advantage over conventional bio-oxidation in that no pressurized gas or specialist equipment is employed. The method is general across different oxidase enzymes and compatible with a variety of functional groups. These results culminate in record space-time yields for bio-oxidation.
ChemistryOpen | 2016
Michael R. Chapman; Susan E. Henkelis; Nikil Kapur; Bao N. Nguyen; Charlotte E. Willans
Abstract Synthetic methods to prepare organometallic and coordination compounds such as Schiff‐base complexes are diverse, with the route chosen being dependent upon many factors such as metal–ligand combination and metal oxidation state. In this work we have shown that electrochemical methodology can be employed to synthesize a variety of metal–salen/salan complexes which comprise diverse metal–ligand combinations and oxidation states. Broad application has been demonstrated through the preparation of 34 complexes under mild and ambient conditions. Unprecedented control over metal oxidation state (MII/III/IV where M=Fe, Mn) is presented by simple modification of reaction conditions. Along this route, a general protocol‐switch is described which allows access to analytically pure FeII/III–salen complexes. Tuning electrochemical potential, selective metalation of a Mn/Ni alloy is also presented which exclusively delivers MnII/IV–salen complexes in high yield.
Chemical Communications | 2015
Michael R. Chapman; Yarseen M. Shafi; Nikil Kapur; Bao N. Nguyen; Charlotte E. Willans
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Grant J. Sherborne; Michael R. Chapman; A. John Blacker; Richard A. Bourne; Thomas W. Chamberlain; Benjamin D. Crossley; Stephanie J. Lucas; Patrick C. McGowan; Mark A. Newton; Thomas E. O. Screen; Paul Thompson; Charlotte E. Willans; Bao N. Nguyen
Organic Process Research & Development | 2017
Michael R. Chapman; Maria H. T. Kwan; Georgina King; Katherine E. Jolley; Mariam Hussain; Shahed Hussain; Ibrahim E. Salama; Carlos González Niño; Lisa A. Thompson; Mary E. Bayana; Adam D. Clayton; Bao N. Nguyen; Nicholas J. Turner; Nikil Kapur; A. John Blacker
Chemical Communications | 2015
Michael R. Chapman; Christopher M. Pask; Alireza Ariafard; Charlotte E. Willans
Organic Process Research & Development | 2018
A. John Blacker; Gabriel Moran-Malagon; Lyn Powell; William Reynolds; Rebecca Stones; Michael R. Chapman