“…Complexes of the large alkaline earths (Ae) calcium, strontium, and barium are increasingly used in molecular catalysis as alternatives to mainstream late transition metal catalysts. [1] These developments can be paralleled with the many breakthroughs in the organometallic chemistry of calcium, [2][3][4] while in comparison progress with strontium [5] and barium [6] has been slow owing to greater synthetic challenges.C a 2+ (r ionic = 1.00 ), Sr 2+ (1.18 )a nd Ba 2+ (1.35 )a re large,e lectropositive ions that generate highly ionic d 0 complexes.D espite their trademark reactivity that generally increases upon descending group 2, heteroleptic Ae complexes may be plagued by ligand scrambling.H ence, although they often demonstrate the best aptitude in catalysis, [1,7] barium complexes can also suffer from excessive basicity,k inetic lability,a nd propensity to form polynuclear, insoluble species. [8] Discrete molecular barium alkoxides are scarce.Barium is characterized by its large size,a ffinity for high (8 or more) coordination numbers,a nd pronounced oxophilicity and electropositivity.W ith regular alcohols,f or example, t BuOH, it yields polymeric alkoxides of low solubility that sometimes decompose to oxoclusters.…”