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1.
Chemistry ; 30(9): e202303438, 2024 Feb 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38032321

ABSTRACT

Manganese(I) carbonyl complexes bearing a MACHO-type ligand (HN(CH2 CH2 PR2 )2 ) readily react in their amido form with CO2 to generate 4-membered {Mn-N-C-O} metallacycles. The stability of the adducts decreases with the steric demand of the R groups at phosphorous (R=isopropyl>adamantyl). The CO2 -adducts display generally a lower reactivity as compared to the parent amido complexes. These adducts can thus be interpretated as masked forms of the active amido catalysts and potentially play important roles as off-loop species or branching points in catalytic transformations of carbon dioxide.

2.
Chemistry ; 30(25): e202304228, 2024 May 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38415315

ABSTRACT

Colloidal and supported manganese nanoparticles were synthesized following an organometallic approach and applied in the catalytic transfer hydrogenation (CTH) of aldehydes and ketones. Reaction parameters for the preparation of colloidal nanoparticles (NPs) were optimized to yield small (2-2.5 nm) and well-dispersed NPs. Manganese NPs were further immobilized on an imidazolium-based supported ionic phase (SILP) and characterized to evaluate NP size, metal loading, and oxidation states. Oxidation of the Mn NPs by the support was observed resulting in an average formal oxidation state of +2.5. The MnOx@SILP material showed promising performance in the CTH of aldehydes and ketones using 2-propanol as a hydrogen donor, outperforming previously reported Mn NPs-based CTH catalysts in terms of metal loading-normalized turnover numbers. Interestingly, MnOx@SILP were found to lose activity upon air exposure, which correlates with an additional increase in the average oxidation state of Mn as revealed by X-ray absorption spectroscopic studies.

3.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; : e202408356, 2024 Jun 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38842465

ABSTRACT

Rhodium complexes in the -I and 0 oxidation states are of great potential interest in catalytic applications. In contrast to their rhodium +I congeners, however, the structural and electronic parameters governing their access and stability are far less understood. Herein, we investigate the two-electron reduction of a parameterized series of bis(diphosphine) Rh complexes [Rh(dxpy)2]NTf2 (x = P-substituent, y = alkanediyl bridging P atoms). Through (electro)reductions from the RhI parents, Rh-I d10-complexes were obtained and characterized spectroscopically, including 103Rh NMR data. The reductive steps convolute with structural rearrangements from square planar to tetrahedral coordination. We found that the extent of these reorganisations defines whether the first E0(RhI/0) and second E0(Rh0/-I) reduction potentials are normally ordered, leading to monoelectronic stepwise events, or inverted, giving bielectronic transitions. Reductionist approaches based on Hammett parameters or the P-Rh-P bite angles provide only partial correlations with the redox potentials. However, we identified the C-O stretch of analogue diphosphine complexes as an expedient computational parameter that enables these correlations through both electronic and geometric features, even in a predictive manner. Gaining control over two-electron reduction behaviors through rationalized ligand effects has potential impact beyond Rh complexes, for molecular and enzymatic metal sites commonly exhibiting bielectronic transitions.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(41): 22845-22854, 2023 Oct 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37815193

ABSTRACT

Valuable substituted phenols are accessible via the selective decarboxylation of hydroxybenzoic acid derivatives using multifunctional catalysts composed of bimetallic iron-ruthenium nanoparticles immobilized on an amine-functionalized supported ionic liquid phase (Fe25Ru75@SILP+IL-NEt2). The individual components of the catalytic system are assembled using a molecular approach to bring metal and amine sites into close contact on the support material, providing high stability and high decarboxylation activity. Operating under a hydrogen atmosphere was found to be essential to achieve high selectivity and yields. As the catalyst materials enable also the selective hydrogenation and hydrodeoxygenation of various additional functional groups (i.e., formyl, acyl, and nitro substituents), direct access to the corresponding phenols can be achieved via integrated tandem reactions. The approach opens versatile synthetic pathways for the production of valuable phenols from a wide range of readily available substrates, including compounds derived from lignocellulosic biomass.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(31): 17103-17111, 2023 Aug 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37490541

ABSTRACT

Hydrogenation reactions of carbon-carbon unsaturated bonds are central in synthetic chemistry. Efficient catalysis of these reactions classically recourses to heterogeneous or homogeneous transition-metal species. Whether thermal or electrochemical, C-C multiple bond catalytic hydrogenations commonly involve metal hydrides as key intermediates. Here, we report that the electrocatalytic alkyne semihydrogenation by molecular Ni bipyridine complexes proceeds without the mediation of a hydride intermediate. Through a combined experimental and theoretical investigation, we disclose a mechanism that primarily involves a nickelacyclopropene resting state upon alkyne binding to a low-valent Ni(0) species. A following sequence of protonation and electron transfer steps via Ni(II) and Ni(I) vinyl intermediates then leads to olefin release in an overall ECEC-type pattern as the most favored pathway. Our results also evidence that pathways involving hydride intermediates are strongly disfavored, which in turn promotes high semihydrogenation selectivity by avoiding competing hydrogen evolution. While bypassing catalytically competent hydrides, this type of mechanism still retains inner-metal-sphere characteristics with the formation of organometallic intermediates, often essential to control regio- or stereoselectivity. We think that this approach to electrocatalytic reductions of unsaturated organic groups can open new paradigms for hydrogenation or hydroelementation reactions.

6.
Small ; 19(18): e2206806, 2023 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36709493

ABSTRACT

Ruthenium nanoparticles (NPs) immobilized on imidazolium-based supported ionic liquid phases (Ru@SILP) act as effective heterogeneous catalysts for the hydrogenation of carbon dioxide (CO2 ) to formate in a mixture of water and triethylamine (NEt3 ). The structure of the imidazolium-based molecular modifiers is varied systematically regarding side chain functionality (neutral, basic, and acidic) and anion to assess the influence of the IL-type environment on the NPs synthesis and catalytic properties. The resulting Ru@SILP materials contain well-dispersed Ru NPs with diameters in the range 0.8-2.9 nm that are found 2 to 10 times more active for CO2 hydrogenation than a reference Ru@SiO2 catalyst under identical conditions. Introduction of sulfonic acid groups in the IL modifiers results in a greatly increased turnover number (TON) and turnover frequency (TOF) at reduced metal loadings. As a result, excellent productivity with TONs up to 16 100 at an initial TOF of 1430 h-1 can be achieved with the Ru@SILP(SO3 H-OAc) catalyst. H/D exchange and other control experiments suggest an accelerated desorption of the formate species from the Ru NPs promoted by the presence of ammonium sulfonate species on Ru@SILP(SO3 H-X) materials, resulting in enhanced catalyst activity and productivity.

7.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(33): e202301956, 2023 Aug 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37345624

ABSTRACT

The rapidly growing importance of green hydrogen and renewable carbon resources as essential feedstocks for sustainable chemical value chains opens room for disruptive innovations regarding chemical production processes. The fluctuation and variability associated with non-fossil energy and raw material supply holds many challenges for catalysts to cope with the resulting dynamics. However, many new opportunities also arise once catalyst design starts to aim at performance that is "adaptive" rather than "task-specific". In this Scientific Perspective, we propose to define adaptivity in catalysis on the basis of three essential properties that are reversibility, rapidity, and robustness (R3 rule). Promising design strategies and selected examples are described to substantiate the scientific concept and to highlight its potential for chemical energy conversion.

8.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(48): e202311427, 2023 Nov 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37677109

ABSTRACT

Ruthenium nanoparticles (NPs) immobilized on an amine-functionalized polymer-grafted silica support act as adaptive catalysts for the hydrogenation of bicyclic heteroaromatics. Whereas full hydrogenation of benzofuran and quinoline derivatives is achieved under pure H2 , introducing CO2 into the H2 gas phase leads to an effective shutdown of the arene hydrogenation while preserving the activity for the hydrogenation of the heteroaromatic part. The selectivity switch originates from the generation of ammonium formate species on the surface of the materials by catalytic hydrogenation of CO2 . The CO2 hydrogenation is fully reversible, resulting in a robust and rapid switch between the two states of the catalyst adapting its performance in response to the feed gas composition. A variety of benzofuran and quinoline derivatives were hydrogenated to fully or partially saturated products in high selectivity and yields simply by altering the composition of the feed gas from H2 to H2 /CO2 . The adaptive catalytic system thus provides controlled access to valuable products using a single catalyst rather than two specific and distinct catalysts with static reactivity.

9.
Acc Chem Res ; 54(9): 2144-2157, 2021 05 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33822579

ABSTRACT

The synthesis and use of supported metal nanoparticle catalysts have a long-standing tradition in catalysis, typically associated with the field of heterogeneous catalysis. More recently, the development and understanding of catalytic systems composed of metal nanoparticles (NPs) that are synthesized from organometallic precursors on molecularly modified surfaces (MMSs) have opened a conceptually new approach to the design of multifunctional catalysts (NPs@MMS). These complex yet fascinating materials bridge molecular ("homogeneous") and material ("heterogeneous") approaches to catalysis and provide access to catalytic systems with tailor-made reactivity through judicious combinations of supports, molecular modifiers, and nanoparticle precursors. A particularly promising field of application is the controlled activation and transfer of dihydrogen, enabling highly selective hydrogenation and hydrogenolysis reactions as relevant for the conversion of biogenic feedstocks and platform chemicals as well as for novel synthetic pathways to fine chemicals and even pharmaceuticals. Consequently, the topic offers an emerging field for interdisciplinary research activities involving organometallic chemists, material scientists, synthetic organic chemists, and catalysis experts.This Account will provide a brief overview of the historical background and cover examples from the most recent developments in the field. A coherent account on the methodological and experimental basis will be given from the long-standing experience in our laboratories. MMSs are widely accessible via chemisorption and physisorption methods for the generation of stable molecular environments on solid surfaces, whereby a special emphasis is given here to ionic liquid-type molecules as modifiers (supported ionic liquid phases, SILPs) and silica as support material. Metal nanoparticles are synthesized following an organometallic approach, allowing the controlled formation of small and uniformly dispersed monometallic or multimetallic NPs in defined composition. A combination of techniques from molecular and material characterization provides a detailed insight into the structure of the resulting materials across various scales (electron microscopy, solid-state NMR, XPS, XAS, etc.).The molecular functionalities grafted on the silica surface have a pronounced influence on the formation, stabilization, and reactivity of the NPs. The complementary and synergistic fine-tuning of the metal and its molecular environment in NPs@MMSs allow in particular the control of the activation of hydrogen and its transfer to substrates. Monometallic (Ru, Rh, Pd) monofunctional NPs@MMSs possess excellent activities for the hydrogenation of alkenes, alkynes, and arenes for which a nonpolarized (homolytic) activation of H2 is predominant. The incorporation of 3d metals in noble metal NPs to give bimetallic (FeRu, CoRh, etc.) monofunctional NPs@MMSs favors a more polarized H2 activation and thus its transfer to the C═O bond, while at the same time preventing the arrangement of noble metal atoms necessary for ring hydrogenation. The incorporation of reactive functionalities, such as, for example, a -SO3H moiety on NPs@MMSs, results in bifunctional catalysts enabling the heterolytic cleavage corresponding to a formal H-/H+ transfer. Consequently, such catalysts possess excellent deoxygenation activity with strong synergistic effects arising from an intimate contact between the nanoparticles and the molecular functionality.While many more efforts are still required to explore, control, and understand the chemistry of NPs@MMS catalysts fully, the currently available examples already highlight the large potential of this approach for the rational design of multifunctional catalytic systems.

10.
Chemistry ; 28(58): e202202081, 2022 Oct 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35916208

ABSTRACT

This study presents the transformation of olefins to branched amines by combining a hydroformylation/aldol condensation tandem reaction with the reductive amination in a combined multiphase system that can be recycled 9 times. The products are branched amines that are precursors for surfactants. Since the multiphase hydrofomylation/aldol condensation system has already been studied, the first step was to develop the partial hydrogenation of unsaturated aldehydes together with a subsequent reductive amination. The rhodium/phosphine catalyst is immobilized in a polar polyethylene phase which separates from the product phase after the reaction. Reaction and catalyst recycling are demonstrated by the conversion of the C14 -aldehyde 2-pentylnonenal with the dimethylamine surrogate dimethylammonium dimethylcarbamate to the corresponding tertiary amine with yields up to 88 % and an average rhodium leaching of less than 0.1 % per recycling run. Furthermore, the positive influence of a Bronsted acid and carbon monoxide on the selectivity are discussed. Finally, the two PEG based systems have been merged in one recycling approach, by using the product phase of the hydroformylation aldol condensation reaction for the reductive amination reaction. The yields are stable during a nine recycling runs and the leaching low with 0.09 % over the two recycling stages.


Subject(s)
Alkenes , Rhodium , Carbon Monoxide , Stereoisomerism , Aldehydes , Catalysis , Amines , Dimethylamines , Surface-Active Agents , Polyethylenes
11.
Chemistry ; 28(23): e202104375, 2022 Apr 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35188311

ABSTRACT

The potential of Pd/Pt complexes for catalytic carboxylation of arenes with CO2 is investigated by means of computational chemistry. Recently we reported that the bis[(2-methoxyphenyl)phosphino]-benzenesulfonamido palladium complex 1 inserts CO2 reversibly in its Pd-C(aryl) bond generating carboxylato complex 2. In the present work we study how geometric and electronic factors of various ligands and substrates influence the overall activation barrier (energy span, ES) of a potential catalytic cycle for arene carboxylation comprising this elementary step. The tendency of the key intermediates to dimerize and thus deactivating the potential catalysts is examined as well as the role of the base, which inevitably is needed to stabilize the reaction product. We show that Pd and Pt complexes I(Pd)-L16-S1 and I(Pt)-L16-S1 do not dimerize, enable the computation of complete catalytic cycles, and show interestingly low ES values of 26.8 and 24.5 kcal/mol, respectively.

12.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(31): e202201004, 2022 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35491237

ABSTRACT

The selective conversion of syngas to higher alcohols is an attractive albeit elusive route in the quest for effective production of chemicals from alternative carbon resources. We report the tandem integration of solid cobalt Fischer-Tropsch and molecular hydroformylation catalysts in a one-pot slurry-phase process. Unprecedented selectivities (>50 wt %) to C2+ alcohols are achieved at CO conversion levels >70 %, alongside negligible CO2 side-production. The efficient overall transformation is enabled by catalyst engineering, bridging gaps in operation temperature and intrinsic selectivity which have classically precluded integration of these reactions in a single conversion step. Swift capture of 1-olefin Fischer-Tropsch primary products by the molecular hydroformylation catalyst, presumably within the pores of the solid catalyst is key for high alcohol selectivity. The results underscore that controlled cooperation between solid aggregate and soluble molecular metal catalysts, which pertain to traditionally dichotomic realms of heterogeneous and homogeneous catalysis, is a promising blueprint toward selective conversion processes.

13.
Small ; 17(5): e2006683, 2021 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33346403

ABSTRACT

The synthesis, characterization, and catalytic properties of bimetallic cobalt-rhodium nanoparticles of defined Co:Rh ratios immobilized in an imidazolium-based supported ionic liquid phase (Cox Rh100- x @SILP) are described. Following an organometallic approach, precise control of the Co:Rh ratios is accomplished. Electron microscopy and X-ray absorption spectroscopy confirm the formation of small, well-dispersed, and homogeneously alloyed zero-valent bimetallic nanoparticles in all investigated materials. Benzylideneacetone and various bicyclic heteroaromatics are used as chemical probes to investigate the hydrogenation performances of the Cox Rh100- x @SILP materials. The Co:Rh ratio of the nanoparticles is found to have a critical influence on observed activity and selectivity, with clear synergistic effects arising from the combination of the noble metal and its 3d congener. In particular, the ability of Cox Rh100- x @SILP catalysts to hydrogenate 6-membered aromatic rings is found to experience a remarkable sharp switch in a narrow composition range between Co25 Rh75 (full ring hydrogenation) and Co30 Rh70 (no ring hydrogenation).

14.
Faraday Discuss ; 230(0): 413-426, 2021 07 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34223853

ABSTRACT

This publication is reminiscent of the 12 principles of CO2 chemistry as formulated in the first Faraday Discussion on CO2 utilization in 2015. Their visionary significance at the time is brought into context with the current developments in society and industry. "What has changed since then?" and "is our enthusiasm still enough?" are only a few questions that are to be answered in the following from today's perspective. The synergy of the use of carbon dioxide (CCU) with the concepts of green chemistry as well as the connection to the energy sector is demonstrated using selected examples from industry and research.

15.
Inorg Chem ; 60(24): 19062-19078, 2021 Dec 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34851088

ABSTRACT

Coordination compounds of earth-abundant 3d transition metals are among the most effective catalysts for the electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide (CO2). While the properties of the metal center are crucial for the ability of the complexes to electrochemically activate CO2, systematic variations of the metal within an identical, redox-innocent ligand backbone remain insufficiently investigated. Here, we report on the synthesis, structural and spectroscopic characterization, and electrochemical investigation of a series of 3d transition-metal complexes [M = Mn(I), Fe(II), Co(II), Ni(II), Cu(I), and Zn(II)] coordinated by a new redox-innocent PNP pincer ligand system. Only the Fe, Co, and Ni complexes reveal distinct metal-centered electrochemical reductions from M(II) down to M(0) and show indications for interaction with CO2 in their reduced states. The Ni(0) d10 species associates with CO2 to form a putative Aresta-type Ni-η2-CO2 complex, where electron transfer to CO2 through back-bonding is insufficient to enable electrocatalytic activity. By contrast, the Co(0) d9 intermediate binding CO2 can undergo additional electron uptake into a formal cobalt(I) metallacarboxylate complex able to promote turnover. Our data, together with the few literature precedents, single out that an unsaturated coordination sphere (coordination number = 4 or 5) and a d7-to-d9 configuration in the reduced low oxidation state (+I or 0) are characteristics that foster electrochemical CO2 activation for complexes based on redox-innocent ligands.

16.
Chimia (Aarau) ; 75(9): 724-732, 2021 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34526177

ABSTRACT

A series of phosphonium-based supported ionic liquid phases (SILPs) was prepared for the immobilization of Rh nanoparticles (Rh@SILP). The influence of systematic variations in the structure of the ionic liquid-type molecular modifiers (anion, P-alkyl chain length) on the formation and catalytic properties of Rh nanoparticles (NPs) was investigated. Both the nature of the anion and the length of the P-alkyl chain were found to have a strong impact on the morphology of the NPs, ranging from small (1.2-1.7 nm) and well-dispersed NPs to the formation of large NPs (9.9-16.5 nm) and/or aggregates. The catalytic properties of the resulting Rh@SILP materials were explored using the hydrogenation of benzylideneacetone and biomass-derived furfuralacetone as model reactions. The changes in ring and C=O hydrogenation activity as a function of the SILP structure and the Rh NPs size allowed for the selective synthesis of products with distinct molecular functionalities.


Subject(s)
Ionic Liquids , Nanoparticles , Biomass , Catalysis , Hydrogenation
17.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 60(21): 11628-11686, 2021 May 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33464678

ABSTRACT

The electrocatalytic transformation of carbon dioxide has been a topic of interest in the field of CO2 utilization for a long time. Recently, the area has seen increasing dynamics as an alternative strategy to catalytic hydrogenation for CO2 reduction. While many studies focus on the direct electron transfer to the CO2 molecule at the electrode material, molecular transition metal complexes in solution offer the possibility to act as catalysts for the electron transfer. C1 compounds such as carbon monoxide, formate, and methanol are often targeted as the main products, but more elaborate transformations are also possible within the coordination sphere of the metal center. This perspective article will cover selected examples to illustrate and categorize the currently favored mechanisms for the electrochemically induced transformation of CO2 promoted by homogeneous transition metal complexes. The insights will be corroborated with the concepts and elementary steps of organometallic catalysis to derive potential strategies to broaden the molecular diversity of possible products.

18.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 60(51): 26500-26505, 2021 Dec 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34596302

ABSTRACT

The acceptorless dehydrogenation of methanol to carbon monoxide and hydrogen was investigated using homogeneous molecular complexes. Complexes of ruthenium and manganese comprising the MACHO ligand framework showed promising activities for this reaction. The molecular ruthenium complex [RuH(CO)(BH4 )(HN(C2 H4 PPh2 )2 )] (Ru-MACHO-BH) achieved up to 3150 turnovers for carbon monoxide and 9230 turnovers for hydrogen formation at 150 °C reaching pressures up to 12 bar when the decomposition was carried out in a closed vessel. Control experiments affirmed that the metal complex mediates the initial fast dehydrogenation of methanol to formaldehyde and methyl formate followed by subsequent slow decarbonylation. Depending on the catalyst and reaction conditions, the CO/H2 ratio in the gas mixture thus varies over a broad range from almost pure hydrogen to the stoichiometric limit of 1:2.

19.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 60(51): 26639-26646, 2021 Dec 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34617376

ABSTRACT

Copper chromite is decorated with iron carbide nanoparticles, producing a magnetically activatable multifunctional catalytic system. This system (ICNPs@Cu2 Cr2 O5 ) can reduce aromatic ketones to aromatic alcohols when exposed to magnetic induction. Under magnetic excitation, the ICNPs generate locally confined hot spots, selectively activating the Cu2 Cr2 O5 surface while the global temperature remains low (≈80 °C). The catalyst selectively hydrogenates a scope of benzylic and non-benzylic ketones under mild conditions (3 bar H2 , heptane), while ICNPs@Cu2 Cr2 O5 or Cu2 Cr2 O5 are inactive when the same global temperature is adjusted by conventional heating. A flow reactor is presented that allows the use of magnetic induction for continuous-flow hydrogenation at elevated pressure. The excellent catalytic properties of ICNPs@Cu2 Cr2 O5 for the hydrogenation of biomass-derived furfuralacetone are conserved for at least 17 h on stream, demonstrating for the first time the application of a magnetically heated catalyst to a continuously operated hydrogenation reaction in the liquid phase.

20.
Chem Rev ; 118(2): 434-504, 2018 01 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29220170

ABSTRACT

CO2 conversion covers a wide range of possible application areas from fuels to bulk and commodity chemicals and even to specialty products with biological activity such as pharmaceuticals. In the present review, we discuss selected examples in these areas in a combined analysis of the state-of-the-art of synthetic methodologies and processes with their life cycle assessment. Thereby, we attempted to assess the potential to reduce the environmental footprint in these application fields relative to the current petrochemical value chain. This analysis and discussion differs significantly from a viewpoint on CO2 utilization as a measure for global CO2 mitigation. Whereas the latter focuses on reducing the end-of-pipe problem "CO2 emissions" from todays' industries, the approach taken here tries to identify opportunities by exploiting a novel feedstock that avoids the utilization of fossil resource in transition toward more sustainable future production. Thus, the motivation to develop CO2-based chemistry does not depend primarily on the absolute amount of CO2 emissions that can be remediated by a single technology. Rather, CO2-based chemistry is stimulated by the significance of the relative improvement in carbon balance and other critical factors defining the environmental impact of chemical production in all relevant sectors in accord with the principles of green chemistry.

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