Called triazenolysis, the new process converts alkenes - common organic compounds such as petroleum - into multifunctional amines useful in various research and industrial applications.
The Technion-developed process mimics ozonolysis, a long-established technology used to create molecules with carbon-oxygen bonds. Ozonolysis, developed more than a century ago, is effective at forming carbon-oxygen bonds but does not produce carbon-nitrogen bonds. This is where triazenolysis comes into play, producing carbon-nitrogen bonds relevant to a wide range of applications by cleaving carbon-carbon bonds in olefins (a class of chemicals made up of hydrogen and carbon with one or more pairs of carbon atoms linked by a double bond).
The research was supported by the Israel Science Foundation (ISF).
Koronatov A, Sakharov P, Ranolia D, Kaushansky A, Fridman N, Gandelman M.
Triazenolysis of alkenes as an aza version of ozonolysis.
Nat Chem. 2024 Oct 11. doi: 10.1038/s41557-024-01653-3