Phillip J. Milner
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Phillip J. Milner.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Thomas J. Maimone; Phillip J. Milner; Tom Kinzel; Y. Zhang; Michael K. Takase; Stephen L. Buchwald
A mechanistic investigation of the Pd-catalyzed conversion of aryl triflates to fluorides is presented. Studies reveal that C-F reductive elimination from a LPd(II)(aryl)F complex (L = t-BuBrettPhos or RockPhos) does not occur when the aryl group is electron rich. Evidence is presented that a modified phosphine, generated in situ, serves as the actual supporting ligand during catalysis with such substrates. A preliminary study of the reactivity of a LPd(II)(aryl)F complex based on this modified ligand is reported.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Hong Geun Lee; Phillip J. Milner; Stephen L. Buchwald
On the basis of mechanism-driven reaction design, a Pd-catalyzed nucleophilic fluorination of aryl bromides and iodides has been developed. The method exhibits a broad substrate scope, especially with respect to nitrogen-containing heteroaryl bromides, and proceeds with minimal formation of the corresponding reduction products. A facilitated ligand modification process was shown to be critical to the success of the reaction.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Phillip J. Milner; Tom Kinzel; Y. Zhang; Stephen L. Buchwald
Isotopic labeling has been used to determine that a portion of the desired product in the Pd-catalyzed fluorination of electron-rich, non-ortho-substituted aryl triflates results from direct C–F cross-coupling. In some cases, formation of a Pd-aryne intermediate is responsible for producing undesired regioisomers. The generation of the Pd-aryne intermediate occurs primarily via ortho-deprotonation of a L·Pd(Ar)OTf (L = biaryl monophosphine) species by CsF and thus competes directly with the transmetalation step of the catalytic cycle. Deuterium labeling studies were conducted with a variety of aryl triflates.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Hong Geun Lee; Phillip J. Milner; Michael S. Placzek; Stephen L. Buchwald; Jacob M. Hooker
A new radiosynthetic protocol for the preparation of [(11)C]aryl nitriles has been developed. This process is based on the direct reaction of in situ prepared L·Pd(Ar)X complexes (L = biaryl phosphine) with [(11)C]HCN. The strategy is operationally simple, exhibits a remarkably wide substrate scope with short reaction times, and demonstrates superior reactivity compared to previously reported systems. With this procedure, a variety of [(11)C]nitrile-containing pharmaceuticals were prepared with high radiochemical efficiency.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018
Miguel I. Gonzalez; Matthew T. Kapelewski; Eric D. Bloch; Phillip J. Milner; Douglas A. Reed; Matthew R. Hudson; Jarad A. Mason; Gokhan Barin; Craig M. Brown; Jeffrey R. Long
Purification of the C8 alkylaromatics o-xylene, m-xylene, p-xylene, and ethylbenzene remains among the most challenging industrial separations, due to the similar shapes, boiling points, and polarities of these molecules. Herein, we report the evaluation of the metal-organic frameworks Co2(dobdc) (dobdc4- = 2,5-dioxido-1,4-benzenedicarboxylate) and Co2( m-dobdc) ( m-dobdc4- = 4,6-dioxido-1,3-benzenedicarboxylate) for the separation of xylene isomers using single-component adsorption isotherms and multicomponent breakthrough measurements. Remarkably, Co2(dobdc) distinguishes among all four molecules, with binding affinities that follow the trend o-xylene > ethylbenzene > m-xylene > p-xylene. Multicomponent liquid-phase adsorption measurements further demonstrate that Co2(dobdc) maintains this selectivity over a wide range of concentrations. Structural characterization by single-crystal X-ray diffraction reveals that both frameworks facilitate the separation through the extent of interaction between each C8 guest molecule with two adjacent cobalt(II) centers, as well as the ability of each isomer to pack within the framework pores. Moreover, counter to the presumed rigidity of the M2(dobdc) structure, Co2(dobdc) exhibits an unexpected structural distortion in the presence of either o-xylene or ethylbenzene that enables the accommodation of additional guest molecules.
Organometallics | 2015
Phillip J. Milner; Yang Yang; Stephen L. Buchwald
A thorough investigation of the challenging Pd-catalyzed fluorination of five-membered heteroaryl bromides is presented. Crystallographic studies and density functional theory (DFT) calculations suggest that the challenging step of this transformation is C-F reductive elimination of five-membered heteroaryl fluorides from Pd(II) complexes. On the basis of these studies, we have found that various heteroaryl bromides bearing phenyl groups in the ortho position can be effectively fluorinated under catalytic conditions. Highly activated 2-bromoazoles, such as 8-bromocaffeine, are also viable substrates for this reaction.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016
Dianne J. Xiao; Julia Oktawiec; Phillip J. Milner; Jeffrey R. Long
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Rebecca L. Siegelman; Thomas M. McDonald; Miguel I. Gonzalez; Jeffrey Daniel Martell; Phillip J. Milner; Jarad A. Mason; Adam H. Berger; Abhoyjit S. Bhown; Jeffrey R. Long
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Phillip J. Milner; Rebecca L. Siegelman; Alexander C. Forse; Miguel I. Gonzalez; Tomče Runčevski; Jeffrey Daniel Martell; Jeffrey A. Reimer; Jeffrey R. Long
Organometallics | 2015
Phillip J. Milner; Yang Yang; Stephen L. Buchwald