Coordination compounds
of earth-abundant 3d transition metals are
among the most effective catalysts for the electrochemical reduction
of carbon dioxide (CO
2
). While the properties of the metal
center are crucial for the ability of the complexes to electrochemically
activate CO
2
, systematic variations of the metal within
an identical, redox-innocent ligand backbone remain insufficiently
investigated. Here, we report on the synthesis, structural and spectroscopic
characterization, and electrochemical investigation of a series of
3d transition-metal complexes [M = Mn(I), Fe(II), Co(II), Ni(II),
Cu(I), and Zn(II)] coordinated by a new redox-innocent PNP pincer
ligand system. Only the Fe, Co, and Ni complexes reveal distinct metal-centered
electrochemical reductions from M(II) down to M(0) and show indications
for interaction with CO
2
in their reduced states. The Ni(0)
d
10
species associates with CO
2
to form a putative
Aresta-type Ni-η
2
-CO
2
complex, where electron
transfer to CO
2
through back-bonding is insufficient to
enable electrocatalytic activity. By contrast, the Co(0) d
9
intermediate binding CO
2
can undergo additional electron
uptake into a formal cobalt(I) metallacarboxylate complex able to
promote turnover. Our data, together with the few literature precedents,
single out that an unsaturated coordination sphere (coordination number
= 4 or 5) and a d
7
-to-d
9
configuration in the
reduced low oxidation state (+I or 0) are characteristics that foster
electrochemical CO
2
activation for complexes based on redox-innocent
ligands.