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Catalytic hydrogenation enabled by ligand-based storage of hydrogen.

Andrew J McNeeceKate A JesseAlexander S FilatovJoseph E SchneiderJohn S Anderson
Published in: Chemical communications (Cambridge, England) (2021)
Biology employs exquisite control over proton, electron, H-atom, or H2 transfer. Similar control in synthetic systems has the potential to facilitate efficient and selective catalysis. Here we report a dihydrazonopyrrole Ni complex where an H2 equivalent can be stored on the ligand periphery without metal-based redox changes and can be leveraged for catalytic hydrogenations. Kinetic and computational analysis suggests ligand hydrogenation proceeds by H2 association followed by H-H scission. This complex is an unusual example where a synthetic system can mimic biology's ability to mediate H2 transfer via secondary coordination sphere-based processes.
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