Surface hydrides are ubiquitous in catalysis. However, their structures and properties are not as well-understood as those of their molecular counterparts, which have been extensively studied for the past 70 years. Hydrides isolated on surfaces have been characterized as stable entities on oxide surfaces or in zeolites. They have also been proposed as reaction intermediates in numerous catalytic processes (hydrogenation, hydrogenolysis, etc.). They have also been prepared via surface organometallic chemistry. In this review, we describe their key structural features and spectroscopic signatures. We discuss their reactivity and stability and also point out unexplored areas.
The activation and conversion of hydrocarbons is one of the most important challenges in chemistry. Transition-metal ions (V, Cr, Fe, Co, etc.) isolated on silica surfaces are known to catalyze such processes. The mechanisms of these processes are currently unknown but are thought to involve C-H activation as the rate-determining step. Here, we synthesize well-defined Co(II) ions on a silica surface using a metal siloxide precursor followed by thermal treatment under vacuum at 500 °C. We show that these isolated Co(II) sites are catalysts for a number of hydrocarbon conversion reactions, such as the dehydrogenation of propane, the hydrogenation of propene, and the trimerization of terminal alkynes. We then investigate the mechanisms of these processes using kinetics, kinetic isotope effects, isotopic labeling experiments, parahydrogen induced polarization (PHIP) NMR, and comparison with a molecular analog. The data are consistent with all of these reactions occurring by a common mechanism, involving heterolytic C-H or H-H activation via a 1,2 addition across a Co-O bond.
Molybdenum-based molecular alkylidyne complexes of the type [MesC≡Mo{OC(CH)(CF)}] (MoF, x = 0; MoF, x = 1; MoF, x = 2; MoF, x = 3; Mes = 2,4,6-trimethylphenyl) and their silica-supported analogues are prepared and characterized at the molecular level, in particular by solid-state NMR, and their alkyne metathesis catalytic activity is evaluated. The C NMR chemical shift of the alkylidyne carbon increases with increasing number of fluorine atoms on the alkoxide ligands for both molecular and supported catalysts but with more shielded values for the supported complexes. The activity of these catalysts increases in the order MoF < MoF < MoF before sharply decreasing for MoF, with a similar effect for the supported systems (MoF ≈ MoF < MoF < MoF). This is consistent with the different kinetic behavior (zeroth order in alkyne for MoF derivatives instead of first order for the others) and the isolation of stable metallacyclobutadiene intermediates of MoF for both molecular and supported species. Detailed solid-state NMR analysis of molecular and silica-supported metal alkylidyne catalysts coupled with DFT/ZORA calculations rationalize the NMR spectroscopic signatures and discernible activity trends at the frontier orbital level: (1) increasing the number of fluorine atoms lowers the energy of the π*(M≡C) orbital, explaining the more deshielded chemical shift values; it also leads to an increased electrophilicity and higher reactivity for catalysts up to MoF, prior to a sharp decrease in reactivity for MoF due to the formation of stable metallacyclobutadiene intermediates; (2) the silica-supported catalysts are less active than their molecular analogues because they are less electrophilic and dynamic, as revealed by their C NMR chemical shift tensors.
Under H(2), the radical cyclization of appropriate dienes can be catalyzed by cobaloximes. H• can be abstracted from an intermediate (presumably a cobalt hydride) by trityl radicals (Ar(3)C•) or by TEMPO. The rate-determining step in these reactions is the uptake of H(2), which is second order in cobalt and first order in hydrogen; the third-order rate constant is 106(3) M(-2)·s(-1).
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.