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Induction-heated ball-milling: a promising asset for mechanochemical reactions

While ball-milling is becoming one of the common tools used by synthetic chemists, an increasing number of studies highlight that it is possible to further expand the nature and number of products which can be synthesized, by heating the reaction media during mechanochemical reactions. Hence, develo...

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Autores principales: Félix, Gautier, Fabregue, Nicolas, Leroy, César, Métro, Thomas-Xavier, Chen, Chia-Hsin, Laurencin, Danielle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10499007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37655593
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3cp02540c
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author Félix, Gautier
Fabregue, Nicolas
Leroy, César
Métro, Thomas-Xavier
Chen, Chia-Hsin
Laurencin, Danielle
author_facet Félix, Gautier
Fabregue, Nicolas
Leroy, César
Métro, Thomas-Xavier
Chen, Chia-Hsin
Laurencin, Danielle
author_sort Félix, Gautier
collection PubMed
description While ball-milling is becoming one of the common tools used by synthetic chemists, an increasing number of studies highlight that it is possible to further expand the nature and number of products which can be synthesized, by heating the reaction media during mechanochemical reactions. Hence, developing set-ups enabling heating and milling to be combined is an important target, which has been looked into in both academic and industrial laboratories. Here, we report a new approach for heating up reaction media during ball-milling reactions, using induction heating (referred to as i-BM). Our set-up is attractive not only because it enables a very fast heating of the milling medium (reaching ≈80 °C in just 15 s), and that it is directly adaptable to commercially-available milling equipment, but also because it enables heating either the walls of the milling jars or the beads themselves, depending on the choice of the materials which compose them. Importantly, the possibility to heat a milling medium “from the inside” (when using for example a PMMA jar and stainless steel beads) is a unique feature compared to previously proposed systems. Through numerical simulations, we then show that it is possible to finely tune the properties of this heating system (e.g. heating rate and maximum temperature reached), by playing with the characteristics of the milling system and/or the induction heating conditions used. Lastly, examples of applications of i-BM are given, showing how it can be used to help elucidate reaction mechanisms in ball-milling, to synthesize new molecules, and to control the physical nature of milling media.
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spelling pubmed-104990072023-09-14 Induction-heated ball-milling: a promising asset for mechanochemical reactions Félix, Gautier Fabregue, Nicolas Leroy, César Métro, Thomas-Xavier Chen, Chia-Hsin Laurencin, Danielle Phys Chem Chem Phys Chemistry While ball-milling is becoming one of the common tools used by synthetic chemists, an increasing number of studies highlight that it is possible to further expand the nature and number of products which can be synthesized, by heating the reaction media during mechanochemical reactions. Hence, developing set-ups enabling heating and milling to be combined is an important target, which has been looked into in both academic and industrial laboratories. Here, we report a new approach for heating up reaction media during ball-milling reactions, using induction heating (referred to as i-BM). Our set-up is attractive not only because it enables a very fast heating of the milling medium (reaching ≈80 °C in just 15 s), and that it is directly adaptable to commercially-available milling equipment, but also because it enables heating either the walls of the milling jars or the beads themselves, depending on the choice of the materials which compose them. Importantly, the possibility to heat a milling medium “from the inside” (when using for example a PMMA jar and stainless steel beads) is a unique feature compared to previously proposed systems. Through numerical simulations, we then show that it is possible to finely tune the properties of this heating system (e.g. heating rate and maximum temperature reached), by playing with the characteristics of the milling system and/or the induction heating conditions used. Lastly, examples of applications of i-BM are given, showing how it can be used to help elucidate reaction mechanisms in ball-milling, to synthesize new molecules, and to control the physical nature of milling media. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023-07-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10499007/ /pubmed/37655593 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3cp02540c Text en This journal is © the Owner Societies https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Félix, Gautier
Fabregue, Nicolas
Leroy, César
Métro, Thomas-Xavier
Chen, Chia-Hsin
Laurencin, Danielle
Induction-heated ball-milling: a promising asset for mechanochemical reactions
title Induction-heated ball-milling: a promising asset for mechanochemical reactions
title_full Induction-heated ball-milling: a promising asset for mechanochemical reactions
title_fullStr Induction-heated ball-milling: a promising asset for mechanochemical reactions
title_full_unstemmed Induction-heated ball-milling: a promising asset for mechanochemical reactions
title_short Induction-heated ball-milling: a promising asset for mechanochemical reactions
title_sort induction-heated ball-milling: a promising asset for mechanochemical reactions
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10499007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37655593
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3cp02540c
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