Institut für Anorganische Chemie, TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Leipziger Str. 29, 09599, Freiberg, Germany.
ChemistryOpen. 2020 Sep 2;9(9):893. doi: 10.1002/open.202000212. eCollection 2020 Sep.
Invited for this month's cover is the group of Marcus Herbig from the TU Bergakademie in Freiberg. The cover picture shows the reaction of CO with a silyl derivative of the biogenic amine ethanolamine. The role of CO as a contributor to climate change makes "carbon capture" a desirable goal. However, in addition to simply capture CO, aminosilanes form silylcarbamates, which represent starting materials for a variety of crucial chemicals. Thus, the entrapped CO represents a useful C building block. The ESF-funded Junior Research Group CO-Sil at the TU Bergakademie Freiberg (represented by their Logo and location) pursues that kind of goals. CO-Sil studies these key reactions of CO insertion in depth by syntheses, quantum chemical calculations and calorimetric experiments. CO brought to the ground by our method shall be feedstock for various branches in chemistry. Read the full text of their Full Paper at 10.1002/open.201900269.
受邀为本月封面的是来自弗雷贝格工业大学的马库斯·赫比希(Marcus Herbig)团队。该封面图片展示了 CO 与生物胺乙醇胺的硅烷基衍生物的反应。CO 作为气候变化贡献者的角色使得“碳捕获”成为一个理想的目标。然而,除了简单地捕获 CO 之外,氨硅烷还会形成硅基氨基甲酸酯,它们是各种关键化学品的起始原料。因此,被捕获的 CO 代表了一种有用的 C 构建块。由 ESF 资助的弗雷贝格工业大学碳捕获与硅烷化(TU Bergakademie Freiberg)初级研究小组(由他们的标志和位置表示)追求这种目标。CO-Sil 通过合成、量子化学计算和量热实验深入研究 CO 插入这些关键反应。通过我们的方法带到地面的 CO 将成为化学各个分支的原料。在 10.1002/open.201900269 上阅读他们全文论文。