Published June 22, 2018 | Version v1
Publication

Mechanistic Studies on the Selective Reduction of CO2 to the Aldehyde Level by a PBP-Supported Nickel Complex

Description

This work describes a thorough investigation of the mechanism of a highly selective hydrosilylation of CO2 to the formaldehyde level catalyzed by a bis(phosphino)boryl (PBP)Ni(II) complex in the presence of B(C6F5)3. CO2 activation by insertion into the Ni–H bond of the catalyst precursor 2 is shown to occur very easily, because of the trans influence exerted by the boryl ligand. During catalysis, the limiting step is B(C6F5)3 dissociation from the active species (PBP)Ni–OCHO·B(C5F6)3 (4), which controls the amount of free borane that can lead to over-reduction to methane. Free borane activates the silane by formation of [R3Si–H···B(C6F5)3], which can then transfer the silylium (R3Si+) fragment to the oxygen atoms of the Ni formate and Ni acetal intermediates. The ion pair [(PBP)Ni][HB(C6F5)3] (5) is the key species that activates CO2 in the catalytic cycle (and silylformate in a second step) with [HB(C6F5)3]− as the source of hydride. Hydride transfer to [(PBP)Ni–OCO]+ is virtually barrierless, whereas hydride transfer to [(PBP)Ni–OCHOSiR3]+ has the second-highest energy barrier of the process (25.2 kcal mol–1). Therefore, the (PBP)Ni framework is instrumental in both reduction steps of the catalysis and controls the selectivity of the reaction by sequestering B(C6F5)3

Abstract

Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad CTQ2013-45011-P and CTQ2014-51912-REDC

Abstract

Junta de Andalucía FQM-2126

Additional details

Created:
March 25, 2023
Modified:
December 1, 2023