PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Towards sustainable organic synthesis – Mechanochemistry replaces lithium with sodium in organic reactions

New mechanochemical method for synthesizing organosodium reagents has promise to reduce reliance on lithium and improve sustainability in general organic synthesis

2025-12-08
(Press-News.org) Highly reactive organometallic reagents, like organolithiums (molecules with a carbon–lithium bond) are essential reagents in organic synthesis because of their applications from polymer synthesis to pharmaceuticals, and more. Lithium resources, however, are difficult to access because concentrated deposits are geographically restricted and modern extraction methods are burdened with environmental costs. Replacing lithium with sodium would be a significant contribution towards environmentally friendly organic synthesis because it is >1000 times more abundant and its extraction from seawater is sustainable and inexpensive.

Despite sodium metal being widely available and organosodium being highly reactive, the conventional method for synthesizing organosodium reagents requires highly toxic reagents and involves complex experimental procedures. Moreover, the use of organosodium reagents is paradoxically limited because they react with nearly all solvents except alkanes (e.g. hexanes C6H14), in which they have low solubility. Recently, however, a joint research team with researchers from WPI-ICReDD at Hokkaido University, Newcastle University, and University of Birmingham may have developed the first environmentally friendly organosodium methodology that could sustainably replace lithium in modern day organic synthesis. These findings were published in Nature Synthesis on December 8, 2025.

The new strategy uses ball-milling mechanochemistry techniques which have recently demonstrated great success in facilitating organic reactions in the solid state with little to no liquid additives. Their experiments demonstrated that organosodium reagents can be generated within 5 minutes by reacting organic halides with lumps of sodium metal in a ball mill in the presence of a small amount of hexanes as a liquid additive. The obtained organosodium reagents were successfully used in reactions with various reactants under the same mechanochemical conditions, producing versatile new compounds in high yield.

When dissolved in solution, organosodium reagents will decompose rapidly from trace amounts of water or oxygen. However, the mechanochemical reactions proceed in the solid-state without concern towards presence of air and moisture, a quality distinct from conventional solvent-based methods that require rigorously dried solvent and inert gas. In addition, their mechanochemical method successfully transformed poorly soluble organic halides and organic fluorides that are unreactive under conventional methods, significantly expanding the applicability of organosodium in organic synthesis. This study establishes a simple, efficient, and more environmentally friendly approach for the synthesis of organosodium reagents. With these findings serving as a new foundation, accelerated developments for organosodium applications in organic synthesis are anticipated.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Wireless device ‘speaks’ to the brain with light

2025-12-08
In a new leap for neurobiology and bioelectronics, Northwestern University scientists have developed a wireless device that uses light to send information directly to the brain — bypassing the body’s natural sensory pathways. The soft, flexible device sits under the scalp but on top of the skull, where it delivers precise patterns of light through the bone to activate neurons across the cortex. In experiments, scientists used the device’s tiny, patterned bursts of light to activate specific populations of neurons deep inside the brains of mouse models. (These neurons are genetically modified to respond to light.) The mice quickly learned ...

Greenhouse gases to intensify extreme flooding in the Central Himalayas

2025-12-08
Rising greenhouse gas emissions could see the size of extreme floods in the Central Himalayas increase by between as much as 73% and 84% by the end of this century. Geographers at Durham University, UK, simulated the risk of increased flooding on the Karnali River, which spans Nepal and China and has the potential to impact communities in Nepal and India. They found that extreme floods – those with a 1% chance of happening within a year – could increase in size by 22% and 26% between 2020 and 2059, compared to flooding seen in the region between 1975 and 2014. This increase ...

New study sheds light on Milky Way's mysterious chemical history

2025-12-08
Clues about how galaxies like our Milky Way form and evolve and why their stars show surprising chemical patterns have been revealed by a new study. The research, published today in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, explores the origins of a puzzling feature in the Milky Way: the presence of two distinct groups of stars with different chemical compositions, known as the "chemical bimodality". When scientists study stars near the Sun, they find two main types based on their chemical makeup, specifically, the amounts of iron (Fe) and magnesium (Mg) they contain. These two groups form ...

Could altering the daily timing of immunotherapy improve survival in people with cancer?

2025-12-08
Receiving anticancer immunotherapy earlier in the day may help individuals with cancer live longer. That’s according to a study published by Wiley online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society. An internal clock, or circadian rhythm, affects when different physiological processes (including immune reactions) in the body are active. This might explain why various medications appear to be more effective when taken at certain times of day. Researchers investigated this phenomenon in 397 patients with extensive-stage small cell lung cancer who received the immunotherapy drugs atezolizumab or durvalumab plus chemotherapy at the ...

Weaving secondary battery electrodes with fibers and tying them like ropes for both durability and performance

2025-12-08
A joint research team led by Dr. Gyujin Song of the Korea Institute of Energy Research (President: Yi, Chang-Keun, hereafter “KIER”), Dr. Kwon-Hyung Lee of the University of Cambridge, and Professor Tae-Hee Kim of the University of Ulsan has successfully developed a new dry-process manufacturing technology for secondary battery electrodes that overcomes the limitations of conventional electrode fabrication processes. The technology developed by the research team is a dry manufacturing process that forms ...

Using social media may impair children’s attention

2025-12-08
Children who spend a significant amount of time on social media tend to experience a gradual decline in their ability to concentrate. This is according to a comprehensive study from Karolinska Institutet, published in Pediatrics Open Science, where researchers followed more than 8,000 children from around age 10 through age 14. The use of screens and digital media has risen sharply in the past 15 years, coinciding with an increase in ADHD diagnoses in Sweden and elsewhere. Researchers at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden and Oregon Health ...

Science briefing: An update on GLP-1 drugs for obesity

2025-12-08
In a special 11 December event for science journalists, the Science Press Package team will revisit the topic recognized as Science’s Breakthrough of the year in 2023: the development of GLP-1 receptor agonists to treat obesity and their efficacy in blunting obesity-associated health problems. The Mani L. Bhaumik Breakthrough of the Year Award that the American Association for the Advancement of Science, publisher of Science, gave to researchers whose work best underpinned ...

Lower doses of immunotherapy for skin cancer give better results

2025-12-08
According to a new study, lower doses of approved immunotherapy for malignant melanoma can give better results against tumours, while reducing side effects. This is reported by researchers at Karolinska Institutet in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. “The results are highly interesting in oncology, as we show that a lower dose of an immunotherapy drug, in addition to causing significantly fewer side effects, actually gives better results against tumours and longer survival,” says last author Hildur Helgadottir, a researcher at the Department of Oncology-Pathology at Karolinska Institutet, who led the study. The traditional ...

Why didn’t the senior citizen cross the road? Slower crossings may help people with reduced mobility

2025-12-08
Road crossings need to slow down to allow people with mobility issues and older pedestrians enough time to use them, research has indicated.  The time interval of crossings in the UK is more than two seconds shorter than people with reduced mobility need, according to a new study by researchers at the Universities of Bath, Birmingham and Exeter.   Led by Dr Max Western from the University of Bath Centre for Motivation and Behaviour Change, the study found that just 1.5% of older adults with ...

ASH 2025: Study suggests that a virtual program focusing on diet and exercise can help reduce side effects of lymphoma treatment

2025-12-07
MIAMI, FLORIDA (EMBARGOED UNTIL DEC. 7, 2025, AT 6:00 P.M. EST) – Patients undergoing treatment for lymphoma often experience adverse side effects that can be so severe that they stop or slow treatment. But a new study shows that a virtual program focusing on diet and exercise is a feasible strategy for minimizing the side effects of cancer therapies and increasing treatment retention.   Early findings from the LIFE-L study will be presented on behalf of the multidisciplinary team by Melissa Lopez, Ph.D., RDN, at the American Society of Hematology (ASH) annual meeting in Orlando. Lopez is a postdoctoral ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

ESC launches guidelines for patients to empower women with cardiovascular disease to make informed pregnancy health decisions 

Towards tailor-made heat expansion-free materials for precision technology

New research delves into the potential for AI to improve radiology workflows and healthcare delivery

Rice selected to lead US Space Force Strategic Technology Institute 4

A new clue to how the body detects physical force

Climate projections warn 20% of Colombia’s cocoa-growing areas could be lost by 2050, but adaptation options remain

New poll: American Heart Association most trusted public health source after personal physician

New ethanol-assisted catalyst design dramatically improves low-temperature nitrogen oxide removal

New review highlights overlooked role of soil erosion in the global nitrogen cycle

Biochar type shapes how water moves through phosphorus rich vegetable soils

Why does the body deem some foods safe and others unsafe?

Report examines cancer care access for Native patients

New book examines how COVID-19 crisis entrenched inequality for women around the world

Evolved robots are born to run and refuse to die

Study finds shared genetic roots of MS across diverse ancestries

Endocrine Society elects Wu as 2027-2028 President

Broad pay ranges in job postings linked to fewer female applicants

How to make magnets act like graphene

The hidden cost of ‘bullshit’ corporate speak

Greaux Healthy Day declared in Lake Charles: Pennington Biomedical’s Greaux Healthy Initiative highlights childhood obesity challenge in SWLA

Into the heart of a dynamical neutron star

The weight of stress: Helping parents may protect children from obesity

Cost of physical therapy varies widely from state-to-state

Material previously thought to be quantum is actually new, nonquantum state of matter

Employment of people with disabilities declines in february

Peter WT Pisters, MD, honored with Charles M. Balch, MD, Distinguished Service Award from Society of Surgical Oncology

Rare pancreatic tumor case suggests distinctive calcification patterns in solid pseudopapillary neoplasms

Tubulin prevents toxic protein clumps in the brain, fighting back neurodegeneration

Less trippy, more therapeutic ‘magic mushrooms’

Concrete as a carbon sink

[Press-News.org] Towards sustainable organic synthesis – Mechanochemistry replaces lithium with sodium in organic reactions
New mechanochemical method for synthesizing organosodium reagents has promise to reduce reliance on lithium and improve sustainability in general organic synthesis