TCI uses cookies to personalize and improve your user experience. By continuing on our website, you accept the use of cookies. You can change or update your cookiesettings at any time.
Maintenance Notice (4:30 AM - 11:00 AM December 21, 2024): This website is scheduled to be unavailable due to maintenance. We appreciate your patience and understanding.
A phase-transfer catalyst enables the reaction in a heterogeneous system between general organic compounds soluble in organic solvents and compounds soluble in water such as inorganic salts. The reaction can be accomplished in a biphasic system of an inexpensive nonpolar aprotic solvent and water without using DMSO or DMF which are high-polar solvents. A phase-transfer catalyst is soluble in both solvents, and it carries anions of inorganic salts into organic solvents and returns them into the water phase. Reactions usually progress under mild conditions with easy work-up procedures. For this reason, they are also used industrially. Typical phase-transfer catalysts are quaternary ammonium salts, crown ethers, and phosphonium compounds etc. Reaction examples are shown as follows.1-4)
Your session will timeout in 10 minutes. You will be redirected to the HOME page after session timeout. Please click the button to continue session from the same page. minute. You will be redirected to the HOME page after session timeout. Please click the button to continue session from the same page.