The
reaction chemistry of both silanes and hydrogen at para-terphenyl diphosphine-supported molybdenum complexes
was explored within the context of carbon dioxide (CO2)
reduction. CO2 hydrosilylation commonly affords reduction
products via silyl acetals. However, while silyl hydride complexes
were characterized in the present system, synthetic, spectroscopic,
and kinetic studies suggest C–O cleavage of CO2 occurs
independently of silanes. In their presence, a putative molybdenum
oxo intermediate is hypothesized to undergo O-atom transfer, yielding
silanol. In contrast, hydrogenation chemistry does occur through an
intermediate molybdenum dihydride capable of inserting CO2 to yield a formate hydride complex. This process is reversible;
slow deinsertion under dinitrogen affords a mixture of molybdenum
dihydride, η2-CO2, and N2 complexes.
The molybdenum hydride formate species is a competent precatalyst
for both CO2 hydrogenation to formate (in the presence
of lithium cations and base) and formic acid dehydrogenation to CO2 and hydrogen (in the presence of base). Mechanistic studies
of both catalytic processes are presented.