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Dive into the research topics where Mizuki Tada is active.

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Featured researches published by Mizuki Tada.


Chemical Reviews | 2008

Hydroamination: Direct Addition of Amines to Alkenes and Alkynes

Thomas Müller; Kai C. Hultzsch; Miguel Yus; Francisco Foubelo; Mizuki Tada

8.4.5. Nitromercuration Reactions 3878 9. Hydroamination of Alkenes and Alkynes under Microwave Irradiation 3878 * To whom correspondence should be addressed. Phone: +49 241 8


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Layered materials with coexisting acidic and basic sites for catalytic one-pot reaction sequences.

Ken Motokura; Mizuki Tada; Yasuhiro Iwasawa

Acidic montmorillonite-immobilized primary amines (H-mont-NH(2)) were found to be excellent acid-base bifunctional catalysts for one-pot reaction sequences, which are the first materials with coexisting acid and base sites active for acid-base tamdem reactions. For example, tandem deacetalization-Knoevenagel condensation proceeded successfully with the H-mont-NH(2), affording the corresponding condensation product in a quantitative yield. The acidity of the H-mont-NH(2) was strongly influenced by the preparation solvent, and the base-catalyzed reactions were enhanced by interlayer acid sites.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Surface-Mediated Visible-Light Photo-oxidation on Pure TiO2(001)

Hiroko Ariga; Toshiaki Taniike; Harumo Morikawa; Mizuki Tada; Byoung Koun Min; Kazuya Watanabe; Yoshiyasu Matsumoto; Susumu Ikeda; Koichiro Saiki; Yasuhiro Iwasawa

We used STM to observe visible light photo-oxidation reactions of formic acid on the ordered lattice-work structure of a TiO(2)(001) surface for the first time. The nanostructured surface makes the band gap significantly smaller than 3.0 eV only at the surface layer, and the surface state of the crystal enables a visible light response.


Journal of Molecular Catalysis A-chemical | 2003

Design of molecular-imprinting metal-complex catalysts

Mizuki Tada; Yasuhiro Iwasawa

This article attempted to review novel metal-complex catalysts prepared by molecular-imprinting methods, presenting our work on recent catalyst design at surfaces. Molecular imprinting is a way to produce cavity with a particular molecule (template) by polymerization of organic and inorganic materials and removal of the template. The cavity with memory of the template provides shape-selective reaction space for the molecule which has similar shape to the template. Recently, the application to metal-complex catalysts has been achieved to exploit unique property different from homogeneous and simple supported metal-complex catalysts. Imprinting metal-complex catalysts prepared by using reaction intermediate or transition state analogues as templates for asymmetric hydride transfer reduction of ketones, aldol condensation, and shape-selective hydrogenation of simple alkenes without any functional groups are focused in the viewpoint of new approaches in design of shape-selective metal-complex catalysts.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2008

Acid–Base Bifunctional Catalysis of Silica–Alumina‐Supported Organic Amines for Carbon–Carbon Bond‐Forming Reactions

Ken Motokura; Mitsuru Tomita; Mizuki Tada; Yasuhiro Iwasawa

Acid-base bifunctional heterogeneous catalysts were prepared by the reaction of an acidic silica-alumina (SA) surface with silane-coupling reagents possessing amino functional groups. The obtained SA-supported amines (SA-NR2) were characterized by solid-state 13C and 29Si NMR spectroscopy, FT-IR spectroscopy, and elemental analysis. The solid-state NMR spectra revealed that the amines were immobilized by acid-base interactions at the SA surface. The interactions between the surface acidic sites and the immobilized basic amines were weaker than the interactions between the SA and free amines. The catalytic performances of the SA-NR2 catalysts for various carbon-carbon bond-forming reactions, such as cyano-ethoxycarbonylation, the Michael reaction, and the nitro-aldol reaction, were investigated and compared with those of homogeneous and other heterogeneous catalysts. The SA-NR2 catalysts showed much higher catalytic activities for the carbon-carbon bond-forming reactions than heterogeneous amine catalysts using other supports, such as SiO2 and Al2O3. On the other hand, homogeneous amines hardly promoted these reactions under similar reaction conditions, and the catalytic behavior of SA-NR2 was also different from that of MgO, which was employed as a typical heterogeneous base. An acid-base dual-activation mechanism for the carbon-carbon bond-forming reactions is proposed.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Alternative Selective Oxidation Pathways for Aldehyde Oxidation and Alkene Epoxidation on a SiO2-Supported Ru−Monomer Complex Catalyst

Mizuki Tada; Satoshi Muratsugu; Mutsuo Kinoshita; Takehiko Sasaki; Yasuhiro Iwasawa

We have prepared a novel Ru-mononer complex supported on a SiO(2) surface by using a Ru-monomer complex precursor with a p-cymene ligand, which was found to be highly active for the selective oxidation of aldehydes and the epoxidation of alkenes using O(2). The structure of the supported Ru catalyst was characterized by means of FT-IR, solid-state NMR, diffuse-reflectance UV/vis, XPS, Ru K-edge EXAFS, and DFT calculations, which demonstrated the formation of isolatedly located, unsaturated Ru centers behind a p-cymene ligand of the Ru-complex precursor. The site-isolated Ru-monomer complex on SiO(2) achieved tremendous TONs (turnover numbers) for the selective oxidation of aldehydes and alkenes; e.g. TONs of 38,800,000 for selective isobutyraldehyde (IBA) oxidation and 2,100,000 for trans-stilbene epoxidation at ambient temperature, which are among the highest TONs in metal-complex catalyzes to our knowledge. We also found that the IBA sole oxidation with an activation energy of 48 kJ mol(-1) much more facile than the trans-stilbene epoxidation with an activation energy of 99 kJ mol(-1) was completely suppressed by the coexistence of trans-stilbene. The switchover of the selective oxidation pathways from the IBA oxidation to the trans-stilbene epoxidation was explained in terms of energy profiles for the alternative selective oxidation pathways, resulting in the preferential coordination of trans-stilbene to the Ru-complex at the surface. This aspect gives an insight into the origin of the efficient catalysis for selective epoxidation of alkenes with IBA/O(2).


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2013

Molecularly Imprinted Ru Complex Catalysts Integrated on Oxide Surfaces

Satoshi Muratsugu; Mizuki Tada

Selective catalysis is critical for the development of green chemical processes, and natural enzymes that possess specialized three-dimensional reaction pockets with catalytically active sites represent the most sophisticated systems for selective catalysis. A reaction space in an enzyme consists of an active metal center, functional groups for molecular recognition (such as amino acids), and a surrounding protein matrix to prepare the reaction pocket. The artificial design of such an integrated catalytic unit in a non-enzymatic system remains challenging. Molecular imprinting of a supported metal complex provides a promising approach for shape-selective catalysis. In this process, an imprinted cavity with a shape matched to a template molecule is created in a polymer matrix with a catalytically active metal site. In this Account, we review our studies on molecularly imprinted metal complex catalysts, focusing on Ru complexes, on oxide surfaces for shape-selective catalysis. Oxide surface-attached transition metal complex catalysts not only improve thermal stability and catalyst dispersion but also provide unique catalytic performance not observed in homogeneous precursors. We designed molecularly imprinted Ru complexes by using surface-attached Ru complexes with template ligands and inorganic/organic surface matrix overlayers to control the chemical environment around the active metal complex catalysts on oxide surfaces. We prepared the designed, molecularly imprinted Ru complexes on SiO(2) surfaces in a step-by-step manner and characterized them with solid-state (SS) NMR, diffuse-reflectance (DR) UV-vis, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Brunauer-Emmett-Teller isotherm (BET), X-ray fluorescence (XRF), and Ru K-edge extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS). The catalytic performances of these Ru complexes suggest that this process of molecular imprinting facilitates the artificial integration of catalytic functions at surfaces. Further advances such as the imprinting of a transition state structure or the addition of multiple binding sites could lead to systems that can achieve 100% selective catalysis.


Chemistry-an Asian Journal | 2008

Acid–Base Bifunctional Catalytic Surfaces for Nucleophilic Addition Reactions

Ken Motokura; Mizuki Tada; Yasuhiro Iwasawa

This article illustrates the modification of oxide surfaces with organic amine functional groups to create acid-base bifunctional catalysts, summarizing our previous reports and also presenting new data. Immobilization of organic amines as bases on inorganic solid-acid surfaces afforded highly active acid-base bifunctional catalysts, which enabled various organic transformations including C--C coupling reactions, though these reactions did not proceed with either the homogeneous amine precursors or the acidic supports alone. Spectroscopic characterization, such as by solid-state MAS NMR and FTIR, revealed not only the interactions between acidic and basic sites but also bifunctional catalytic reaction mechanisms.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Tunable Heterogeneous Catalysis: N-Heterocyclic Carbenes as Ligands for Supported Heterogeneous Ru/K-Al2O3 Catalysts To Tune Reactivity and Selectivity

Johannes B. Ernst; Satoshi Muratsugu; Fei Wang; Mizuki Tada; Frank Glorius

Here we report, for the first time, an extensive characterization of an N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC)-modified supported heterogeneous catalyst. The existence of the metal-carbene bond could be proven by (13)C-SS-NMR experiments. Furthermore, it could be shown that the modification with NHCs does not structurally change the catalyst itself. The effect of the nature and the loading of the NHC on the activity and selectivity of the heterogeneous catalyst is presented by a hydrogenation study, finally leading to an NHC-enabled tunable heterogeneous catalyst for chemoselective hydrogenation.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2011

In situ time-resolved XAFS study on the structural transformation and phase separation of Pt3Sn and PtSn alloy nanoparticles on carbon in the oxidation process

Yohei Uemura; Yasuhiro Inada; Kyoko K. Bando; Takehiko Sasaki; Naoto Kamiuchi; Koichi Eguchi; Akira Yagishita; Masaharu Nomura; Mizuki Tada; Yasuhiro Iwasawa

The dynamic behavior and kinetics of the structural transformation of supported bimetallic nanoparticle catalysts with synergistic functions in the oxidation process are fundamental issues to understand their unique catalytic properties as well as to regulate the catalytic capability of alloy nanoparticles. The phase separation and structural transformation of Pt(3)Sn/C and PtSn/C catalysts during the oxidation process were characterized by in situ time-resolved energy-dispersive XAFS (DXAFS) and quick XAFS (QXAFS) techniques, which are element-selective spectroscopies, at the Pt L(III)-edge and the Sn K-edge. The time-resolved XAFS techniques provided the kinetics of the change in structures and oxidation states of the bimetallic nanoparticles on carbon surfaces. The kinetic parameters and mechanisms for the oxidation of the Pt(3)Sn/C and PtSn/C catalysts were determined by time-resolved XAFS techniques. The oxidation of Pt to PtO in Pt(3)Sn/C proceeded via two successive processes, while the oxidation of Sn to SnO(2) in Pt(3)Sn/C proceeded as a one step process. The rate constant for the fast Pt oxidation, which was completed in 3 s at 573 K, was the same as that for the Sn oxidation, and the following slow Pt oxidation rate was one fifth of that for the first Pt oxidation process. The rate constant and activation energy for the Sn oxidation in PtSn/C were similar to those for the Sn oxidation in Pt(3)Sn/C. In the PtSn/C, however, it was hard for Pt oxidation to PtO to proceed at 573 K, where Pt oxidation was strongly affected by the quantity of Sn in the alloy nanoparticles due to swift segregation of SnO(2) nanoparticles/layers on the Pt nanoparticles. The mechanisms for the phase separation and structure transformation in the Pt(3)Sn/C and PtSn/C catalysts are also discussed on the basis of the structural kinetics of the catalysts themselves determined by the in situ time-resolved DXAFS and QXAFS.

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Yasuhiro Iwasawa

University of Electro-Communications

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Tomoya Uruga

University of Electro-Communications

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Oki Sekizawa

University of Electro-Communications

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Toshihiko Yokoyama

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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Hirosuke Matsui

Nara Institute of Science and Technology

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Ken Motokura

Tokyo Institute of Technology

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Toshiaki Taniike

Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology

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