Litcius/Paper detail

Mechanochemistry: opportunities for new and cleaner synthesis

Stuart L. James, Christopher J. Adams, Carsten Bolm, Dario Braga, Paul Collier, Tomislav Friščić, Fabrizia Grepioni, Kenneth D. M. Harris, Geoffrey Hyett, William Jones, Anke Krebs, James Mack, Lucia Maini, A.G. Orpen, Ivan P. Parkin, William C. Shearouse, Jonathan W. Steed, Daniel C. Waddell

2011Chemical Society Reviews2,996 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The aim of this critical review is to provide a broad but digestible overview of mechanochemical synthesis, i.e. reactions conducted by grinding solid reactants together with no or minimal solvent. Although mechanochemistry has historically been a sideline approach to synthesis it may soon move into the mainstream because it is increasingly apparent that it can be practical, and even advantageous, and because of the opportunities it provides for developing more sustainable methods. Concentrating on recent advances, this article covers industrial aspects, inorganic materials, organic synthesis, cocrystallisation, pharmaceutical aspects, metal complexes (including metal-organic frameworks), supramolecular aspects and characterization methods. The historical development, mechanistic aspects, limitations and opportunities are also discussed (314 references).

Topics & Concepts

MechanochemistryMainstreamNanotechnologySupramolecular chemistryBiochemical engineeringGrindingOrganic synthesisCharacterization (materials science)ChemistryEngineeringMaterials sciencePolitical scienceOrganic chemistryMechanical engineeringCatalysisLawCrystal structureCrystallography and molecular interactionsX-ray Diffraction in CrystallographyCultural Heritage Materials Analysis