Abstract

One of the most important ways to practice environmental stewardship is to turn waste materials into useful nanomaterials through ecological recycling. This work introduces a magnetic organocatalyst made from red mud waste, adding to the “greening” of global chemical processes.The new composite (Fe3O4@SiO2@(CH2)3@4-(2-Aminoethyl)-morpholine) is introduced and characterized by different spectroscopic methods such as fourier transform infrared (FT-IR), X-ray diffraction (XRD), field emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM), energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX), mapping, thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) and vibrating-sample magnetometers (VSM). Catalytic activity of the catalyst was evaluated in production of some polyhydroquinoline derivatives and the results showed efficiency. Nine polyhydroquinoline derivatives were synthesized (M1-M9) and their cytotoxic properties evaluated against two human-cancerous cell lines (Hep-G2 and SW480) by MTT assay. Most of the compounds exhibited high inhibitory activity against two studied cell lines. M2 bearing 2-chloro substitution on phenyl ring was exhibited appropriate activity (IC50 = 14.70 ± 3.11 µM) against SW480 cell line in comparison to cisplatin as positive control.

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