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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(15): 10451-10464, 2024 Apr 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38589774

RESUMEN

While outstanding catalysts are known for the ring-opening copolymerization (ROCOP) of CO2 and propene oxide (PO), few are reported at low CO2 pressure. Here, a new series of Co(III)M(I) heterodinuclear catalysts are compared. The Co(III)K(I) complex shows the best activity (TOF = 1728 h-1) and selectivity (>90% polymer, >99% CO2) and is highly effective at low pressures (<10 bar). CO2 insertion is a prerate determining chemical equilibrium step. At low pressures, the concentration of the active catalyst depends on CO2 pressure; above 12 bar, its concentration is saturated, and rates are independent of pressure, allowing the equilibrium constant to be quantified for the first time (Keq = 1.27 M-1). A unified rate law, applicable under all operating conditions, is presented. As proof of potential, published data for leading literature catalysts are reinterpreted and the CO2 equilibrium constants estimated, showing that this unified rate law applies to other systems.

2.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(37): e202308378, 2023 Sep 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37409487

RESUMEN

Carbon dioxide copolymerization is a front-runner CO2 utilization strategy but its viability depends on improving the catalysis. So far, catalyst structure-performance correlations have not been straightforward, limiting the ability to predict how to improve both catalytic activity and selectivity. Here, a simple measure of a catalyst ground-state parameter, metal reduction potential, directly correlates with both polymerization activity and selectivity. It is applied to compare performances of 6 new heterodinuclear Co(III)K(I) catalysts for propene oxide (PO)/CO2 ring opening copolymerization (ROCOP) producing poly(propene carbonate) (PPC). The best catalyst shows an excellent turnover frequency of 389 h-1 and high PPC selectivity of >99 % (50 °C, 20 bar, 0.025 mol% catalyst). As demonstration of its utility, neither DFT calculations nor ligand Hammett parameter analyses are viable predictors. It is proposed that the cobalt redox potential informs upon the active site electron density with a more electron rich cobalt centre showing better performances. The method may be widely applicable and is recommended to guide future catalyst discovery for other (co)polymerizations and carbon dioxide utilizations.

3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(39): 17929-17938, 2022 Oct 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36130075

RESUMEN

A combined computational and experimental investigation into the catalytic cycle of carbon dioxide and propylene oxide ring-opening copolymerization is presented using a Co(III)K(I) heterodinuclear complex (Deacy, A. C. Co(III)/Alkali-Metal(I) Heterodinuclear Catalysts for the Ring-Opening Copolymerization of CO2 and Propylene Oxide. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2020, 142(45), 19150-19160). The complex is a rare example of a dinuclear catalyst, which is active for the copolymerization of CO2 and propylene oxide, a large-scale commercial product. Understanding the mechanisms for both product and byproduct formation is essential for rational catalyst improvements, but there are very few other mechanistic studies using these monomers. The investigation suggests that cobalt serves both to activate propylene oxide and to stabilize the catalytic intermediates, while potassium provides a transient carbonate nucleophile that ring-opens the activated propylene oxide. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations indicate that reverse roles for the metals have inaccessibly high energy barriers and are unlikely to occur under experimental conditions. The rate-determining step is calculated as the ring opening of the propylene oxide (ΔGcalc† = +22.2 kcal mol-1); consistent with experimental measurements (ΔGexp† = +22.1 kcal mol-1, 50 °C). The calculated barrier to the selectivity limiting step, i.e., backbiting from the alkoxide intermediate to form propylene carbonate (ΔGcalc† = +21.4 kcal mol-1), is competitive with the barrier to epoxide ring opening (ΔGcalc† = +22.2 kcal mol-1) implicating an equilibrium between alkoxide and carbonate intermediates. This idea is tested experimentally and is controlled by carbon dioxide pressure or temperature to moderate selectivity. The catalytic mechanism, supported by theoretical and experimental investigations, should help to guide future catalyst design and optimization.

4.
Acc Chem Res ; 55(15): 1997-2010, 2022 08 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35863044

RESUMEN

The development of sustainable plastic materials is an essential target of chemistry in the 21st century. Key objectives toward this goal include utilizing sustainable monomers and the development of polymers that can be chemically recycled/degraded. Polycarbonates synthesized from the ring-opening copolymerization (ROCOP) of epoxides and CO2, and polyesters synthesized from the ROCOP of epoxides and anhydrides, meet these criteria. Despite this, designing efficient catalysts for these processes remains challenging. Typical issues include the requirement for high catalyst loading; low catalytic activities in comparison with other commercialized polymerizations; and the requirement of costly, toxic cocatalysts. The development of efficient catalysts for both types of ROCOP is highly desirable. This Account details our work on the development of catalysts for these two related polymerizations and, in particular, focuses on dinuclear complexes, which are typically applied without any cocatalyst. We have developed mechanistic hypotheses in tandem with our catalysts, and throughout the Account, we describe the kinetic, computational, and structure-activity studies that underpin the performance of these catalysts. Our initial research on homodinuclear M(II)M(II) complexes for cyclohexene oxide (CHO)/CO2 ROCOP provided data to support a chain shuttling catalytic mechanism, which implied different roles for the two metals in the catalysis. This mechanistic hypothesis inspired the development of mixed-metal, heterodinuclear catalysts. The first of this class of catalysts was a heterodinuclear Zn(II)Mg(II) complex, which showed higher rates than either of the homodinuclear [Zn(II)Zn(II) and Mg(II)Mg(II)] analogues for CHO/CO2 ROCOP. Expanding on this finding, we subsequently developed a Co(II)Mg(II) complex that showed field leading rates for CHO/CO2 ROCOP and allowed for unique insight into the role of the two metals in this complex, where it was established that the Mg(II) center reduced transition state entropy and the Co(II) center reduced transition state enthalpy. Following these discoveries, we subsequently developed a range of heterodinuclear M(III)M(I) catalysts that were capable of catalyzing a broad range of copolymerizations, including the ring-opening copolymerization of CHO/CO2, propylene oxide (PO)/CO2, and CHO/phthalic anhydride (PA). Catalysts featuring Co(III)K(I) and Al(III)K(I) were found to be exceptionally effective for PO/CO2 and CHO/PA ROCOP, respectively. Such M(III)M(I) complexes operate through a dinuclear metalate mechanism, where the M(III) binds and activates monomers while the M(I) species binds the polymer change in close proximity to allow for insertion into the activated monomer. Our research illustrates how careful catalyst design can yield highly efficient systems and how the development of mechanistic understanding aids this process. Avenues of future research are also discussed, including the applicability of these heterodinuclear catalysts in the synthesis of sustainable materials.


Asunto(s)
Anhídridos , Dióxido de Carbono , Dióxido de Carbono/química , Catálisis , Compuestos Epoxi/química , Metales/química , Polimerizacion , Polímeros/química
5.
Chemistry ; 27(47): 12224-12231, 2021 Aug 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34133043

RESUMEN

A series heterodinuclear catalysts, operating without co-catalyst, show good performances for the ring opening copolymerization (ROCOP) of cyclohexene oxide and carbon dioxide. The complexes feature a macrocyclic ligand designed to coordinate metals such as Zn(II), Mg(II) or Co(III), in a Schiff base 'pocket', and Na(I) in a modified crown-ether binding 'pocket'. The 11 new catalysts are used to explore the influences of the metal combinations and ligand backbones over catalytic activity and selectivity. The highest performance catalyst features the Co(III)Na(I) combination, [N,N'-bis(3,3'-triethylene glycol salicylidene)-1,2-ethylenediamino cobalt(III) di(acetate)]sodium (7), and it shows both excellent activity and selectivity at 1 bar carbon dioxide pressure (TOF=1590 h-1 , >99 % polymer selectivity, 1 : 10: 4000, 100 °C), as well as high activity at higher carbon dioxide pressure (TOF=4343 h-1 , 20 bar, 1 : 10 : 25000). Its rate law shows a first order dependence on both catalyst and cyclohexene oxide concentrations and a zeroth order for carbon dioxide pressure, over the range 10-40 bar. These new catalysts eliminate any need for ionic or Lewis base co-catalyst and instead exploit the coordination of earth-abundant and inexpensive Na(I) adjacent to a second metal to deliver efficient catalysis. They highlight the potential for well-designed ancillary ligands and inexpensive Group 1 metals to deliver high performance heterodinuclear catalysts for carbon dioxide copolymerizations and, in future, these catalysts may also show promise in other alternating copolymerization and carbon dioxide utilizations.

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