In 'M-SG' an
alkali metal is absorbed into
silica gel at elevated temperatures. The resulting black powder material is an effective
reducing agent and safe to handle as opposed to the pure metal. The material can also be used as a
desiccant and as a
hydrogen source .
The metal is either
sodium or a sodium -
potassium alloy (
Na2K). The molten metal is mixed with silica gel under constant agitation at
room temperature. This 'phase 0' material must be handled in an inert atmosphere. Heating phase 0 at 150°
C takes it to 'phase I'. When this material is exposed to dry oxygen the reducing power is not affected. At further heating to 400°
C 'phase II' can be handled safely in an ambient environment.
The metal reacts with the silicon gel in an
exothermic reaction in which Na
4Si
4 nanoparticles are formed. The powder reacts with water to form
hydrogen.
Compounds such as
biphenyl and
naphthalene are reduced by the powder and form highly coloured
radical anions. The powder can also be introduced in a
column chromatography setup and eluted with organic reactants in order to probe the reducing power. The powder is mixed with additional (wet) silica gel which provides additional hydrogen. A
Birch reduction of naphthalene takes 5 minutes elution time. The column converts benzyl chloride to bibenzyl in a
Wurtz coupling and in a similar fashion dibenzothiophene is reduced to
biphenyl.

M-SG reductions from top to bottom benzyl chloride reduction to bibenzyl, dibenzothiophene reduction to biphenyl and naphtalene reduction to dehydronaphtalene
See also
★
Potassium graphite
References
★ ''Alkali Metals Plus Silica Gel: Powerful Reducing Agents and Convenient Hydrogen Sources '' James L. Dye, Kevin D. Cram, Stephanie A. Urbin, Mikhail Y. Redko, James E. Jackson, and Michael Lefenfeld
J. Am. Chem. Soc., 127 (26), 9338 -9339, '2005'
Abstract