Loading...
Projects / Programmes source: ARIS

The development of immobilized catalysts for the preparation of deuterated organic compounds

Research activity

Code Science Field Subfield
1.04.00  Natural sciences and mathematics  Chemistry   

Code Science Field
1.04  Natural Sciences  Chemical sciences 
Keywords
Immobilized catalyst, gelator, deuteration, deuterium labelling, dendrimer, polymer, supramolecular gel, biocatalyst, enzyme, immobilization, recover, reuse, circular economy, late-stage deuteration, flow chemistry, microreactor, kinetics, mass transfer
Evaluation (metodology)
source: COBISS
Points
5,581.87
A''
1,182.17
A'
2,920.44
A1/2
3,753.49
CI10
7,751
CImax
728
h10
42
A1
20.12
A3
7.74
Data for the last 5 years (citations for the last 10 years) on October 15, 2025; Data for score A3 calculation refer to period 2020-2024
Data for ARIS tenders ( 04.04.2019 – Programme tender, archive )
Database Linked records Citations Pure citations Average pure citations
WoS  350  8,602  7,367  21.05 
Scopus  349  9,328  8,024  22.99 
Organisations (1) , Researchers (17)
0103  University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Chemistry and Chemical Technology
no. Code Name and surname Research area Role Period No. of publicationsNo. of publications
1.  35339  PhD Rok Ambrožič  Chemical engineering  Researcher  2023 - 2025  93 
2.  57300  PhD Davide Benedetto Tiz  Chemistry  Researcher  2024  29 
3.  36808  PhD Aljaž Gaber  Biochemistry and molecular biology  Researcher  2023 - 2025  107 
4.  57216  PhD Ross David Jansen-van Vuuren  Chemistry  Head  2023 - 2025  78 
5.  56882  Luka Jedlovčnik  Chemistry  Young researcher  2023 - 2025  25 
6.  19177  PhD Marjan Jereb  Chemistry  Researcher  2023 - 2025  174 
7.  13822  PhD Janez Košmrlj  Chemistry  Researcher  2023 - 2025  565 
8.  51842  PhD Tadej Menegatti  Biotechnology  Researcher  2023 - 2025  28 
9.  26028  PhD Marko Novinec  Biochemistry and molecular biology  Researcher  2023 - 2025  247 
10.  55646  Ana Obaha  Biochemistry and molecular biology  Researcher  2023 - 2025 
11.  08041  PhD Igor Plazl  Chemical engineering  Researcher  2023 - 2025  520 
12.  60454  Liju Raju, Ph.D.  Chemistry  Researcher  2025  12 
13.  32874  Mojca Seručnik  Biotechnology  Researcher  2023 - 2025  38 
14.  56884  Borut Šketa  Chemical engineering  Young researcher  2023 - 2025  21 
15.  53159  Žan Testen  Chemistry  Young researcher  2023 - 2025 
16.  25027  PhD Damijana Urankar  Chemistry  Researcher  2023 - 2025  103 
17.  11250  PhD Polona Žnidaršič Plazl  Biotechnology  Researcher  2023 - 2025  500 
Abstract
Deuterium(D)-labelled organic compounds are used in many fields including medicinal chemistry, mechanistic studies, polymer/biological elucidation, and bioanalytical analyses. D-labelled compounds can be prepared either indirectly, via total synthetic routes (starting from deuterated substrates or by using deuterated reagents), or directly, by exchanging hydrogen (or another atom) in the target molecule with deuterium. Although both approaches can be driven using acids or bases (or reaction with D2O), the use of catalysts enables milder reaction conditions and higher functional group tolerance. However, the preparation of these catalysts [enzymes (biocatalysts), electrocatalysts, organometallic catalysts, organocatalysts, and photocatalysts] often involves expensive, lengthy, and resource-consuming procedures while many of the state-of-the-art organometallic catalysts contain rare precious metals such as iridium or palladium. Creating immobilized, recyclable versions of these catalysts represents an advance towards circular chemistry, aligning with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and the European Green Deal. In this application, we propose the study of three such recyclable catalysts: (1) dendrimer- and polymer-supported catalysts; (2) supramolecular catalytic gels; and (3) immobilized biocatalysts, all of which could ultimately be used in a continuous flow microreactor (CFMR) system. Currently, for the preparation of D-labelled compounds, there is only one report of an immobilized biocatalyst and no examples in the literature of (1) nor (3), despite the great advances of these materials in other areas. Our research therefore seeks to contribute to the new green economy by developing immobilized catalysts for the preparation of D-labelled organic compounds. Ultimately, we seek to demonstrate the highly coveted late stage deuteration of complex molecules such as pharmaceutical compounds using immobilized catalysts in CFMR systems.
Views history
Favourite