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Journal ArticleDOI

Ascendancy of Nitrogen Heterocycles in the Computationally Designed Mn(I)PNN Pincer Catalysts on the Hydrogenation of Carbon Dioxide to Methanol.

TLDR
In this article, the authors provided comprehensive density functional theoretic investigations of six new Mn(I)PNN complexes, which are designed to perform CO2 to methanol conversion under milder reaction conditions.
Abstract
The development of sustainable catalysts to get methanol from CO2 under milder conditions and without any additives is still considered an arduous task. In many instances, transition-metal-catalyzed carbon dioxide to formic acid formation is more facile than methanol formation. This article provides comprehensive density functional theoretic investigations of six new Mn(I)PNN complexes, which are designed to perform CO2 to methanol conversion under milder reaction conditions. All these six catalysts have similar structural features except at terminal nitrogen, -N (1), where adenine-inspired nitrogen heterocycles containing pyridine and pyrimidine moieties are attached to instill an electron withdrawing effect on the central metal and thus to facilitate dihydrogen polarization during the catalyst regeneration. All these computationally modeled Mn(I)PNN complexes demonstrate the promising catalytic activity to get methanol through cascade catalytic cycles at 298.15 K. The metal-ligand cooperative (MLC) as well as noncooperative (NC) pathways are investigated for each catalytic cycle. The NC pathway is the preferred pathway for formic acid and formaldehyde formation, whereas methanol formation proceeds through only the MLC pathway. Different nitrogen heterocycles attached to the -N (1) terminal manifested a considerable amount of impact on the Gibbs free energies, overall activation energies, and computed turnover frequencies (TOFs). Among all the catalysts, SPCAT02 provides excellent TOFs for HCO2H (500 151 h-1), HCHO (11 912 h-1), and CH3OH (2 372 400 h-1) formation at 50 °C. SPCAT04 is found to be a better catalyst for the selective formation of formic acid formation at room temperature than the rest of the catalysts. The computed TOF results are found reliable upon comparison with experimentally established catalysts. To establish the structure-activity relationship, the activation strain model and Fukui function calculations are performed on all the catalysts. Both these studies provide complementary results. The present study revealed a very important finding that a more electrophilic metal center could facilitate the CO2 hydrogenation reaction robustly. All computationally designed catalysts could be cheaper and better alternatives to convert CO2 to methanol under mild reaction conditions in an aqueous medium.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A Shuttle Catalysis: Elucidating a True Reaction Mechanism Involved in the Palladium Xantphos-Assisted Transposition of Aroyl Chloride and Aryl Iodide Functional Groups.

TL;DR: A thorough DFT study was performed to unravel the true mechanism involved in the Pd(0)-catalyzed functional group transposition between aroyl chlorides and aryl iodides as discussed by the authors .
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative CO2 Hydrogenation Catalysis with MACHO-type Manganese Complexes

TL;DR: In this paper , a pair of manganese complexes containing MACHO-type pincer ligands bearing a secondary amine and a tertiary amine were compared for the hydrogenation of CO2 to formate in the presence of a base.
Journal ArticleDOI

Insights into the CO2 Capture Capacity  of Covalent Organic Frameworks.

TL;DR: In this paper , an inexpensive computational model is designed to demonstrate the efficacy of the complex COF toward CO2 capture, and interaction energy calculations of small repeating units of COF precisely demonstrate CO2 uptake capacity at high pressure and effective dual descriptors values of these repeating units accurately establish their structure-property relationships under ambient conditions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Selective reduction of carbon dioxide to bis(silyl)acetal catalyzed by a PBP-supported nickel complex

TL;DR: An efficient catalyst that consists of a bis(phosphino)boryl nickel hydride complex in combination with B(C6F5)3, for the highly selective hydrosilation of CO2 to bis(silyl)acetal derivatives.
Journal ArticleDOI

Computational Mechanistic Studies on Reactions of Transition Metal Complexes with Noninnocent Pincer Ligands: Aromatization–Dearomatization or Not

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide a summary of theoretical studies on the mechanisms of the reactions mediated by transition metal complexes with noninnocent pincer ligands synthesized by Milstein and co-workers.
Journal ArticleDOI

CO2 Hydrogenation Catalysts with Deprotonated Picolinamide Ligands

TL;DR: In this article, a 4-hydroxy-N-methylpicolinamidate ligand was used as a catalysts for the hydrogenation of CO2 to formate in basic water.
Journal ArticleDOI

Carbon Dioxide Reduction to Methanol Catalyzed by Mn(I) PNP Pincer Complexes under Mild Reaction Conditions

TL;DR: In this article, a well defined Mn(I) hydrido carbonyl PNP pincer-type catalysts were tested as efficient and selective nonprecious transition metal catalysts for the reduction of CO2 to MeOH in the presence of hydrocarbons.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acid-Assisted Hydrogenation of CO 2 to Methanolin a Homogeneous Catalytic Cascade System

TL;DR: In this paper, a catalytic cascade system for CO2 hydrogenation to MeOH under acidic conditions is described, which uses three catalysts which promote stepwise formation and conversion of formic acid and f...
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