Sustainable conversion of carbon dioxide: the advent of organocatalysis

Author

G. Fiorani

W. Guo

A. W. Kleij

Publication date

2014



Abstract

<p> The conversion of carbon dioxide (CO<small><sub>2</sub></small>), an abundant renewable carbon reagent, into chemicals of academic and industrial interest is of imminent importance to create a higher degree of sustainability in chemical processing and production. Recent progress in this field is characterised by a plethora of organic molecules able to mediate the conversion of suitable substrates in the presence of CO<small><sub>2</sub></small> into a variety of value-added commodities with advantageous features combining cost-effectiveness, metal-free transformations and general substrate activation profiles. In this review, the latest developments in the field of CO<small><sub>2</sub></small> catalysis are discussed with a focus on organo-mediated conversions and their increasing importance in serving as practicable alternatives for metal-based processes. Also a critical assessment of the state-of-the-art methods is presented with attention to those features that need further development to increase the usefulness of organocatalysis in the production of organic molecules of potential commercial interest.</p>

Document Type

Article

Language

English

Publisher

ACS

Version of

Green Chem

Grant Agreement Number

(SEV-2013-0319)

CTQ2011-27385

Related items

FP7-PEOPLE-2013-IEF project RENOVACARB

CELLEX

ICREA

MINECO

SEVERO OCHOA

FP7-PEOPLE-2013-IEF project RENOVACARB,CELLEX,ICIQ, ICREA,MINECO, SEVERO OCHOA

Documents

Green Chem 2015, 17, 1375-1389 LATEST.pdf

7.312Mb

 

Rights

This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2015

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