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How Solid Surfaces Control Stability and Interactions of Supported Cationic Cu I (dppf) Complexes─A Solid-State NMR Study.

Marc SchnierleSina KlostermannElif KayaZheng LiDaniel DittmannCarolin RiegDeven P EstesJohannes KarwounopoulosMark R RingenbergMichael Dyballa
Published in: Inorganic chemistry (2023)
Organometallic complexes are frequently deposited on solid surfaces, but little is known about how the resulting complex-solid interactions alter their properties. Here, a series of complexes of the type Cu(dppf)(L x ) + (dppf = 1,1'-bis(diphenylphosphino)ferrocene, L x = mono- and bidentate ligands) were synthesized, physisorbed, ion-exchanged, or covalently immobilized on solid surfaces and investigated by 31 P MAS NMR spectroscopy. Complexes adsorbed on silica interacted weakly and were stable, while adsorption on acidic γ-Al 2 O 3 resulted in slow complex decomposition. Ion exchange into mesoporous Na-[Al]SBA-15 resulted in magnetic inequivalence of 31 P nuclei verified by 31 P- 31 P RFDR and 1 H- 31 P FSLG HETCOR. DFT calculations verified that a MeCN ligand dissociates upon ion exchange. Covalent immobilization via organic linkers as well as ion exchange with bidentate ligands both lead to rigidly bound complexes that cause broad 31 P CSA tensors. We thus demonstrate how the interactions between complexes and functional surfaces determine and alter the stability of complexes. The applied Cu(dppf)(L x ) + complex family members are identified as suitable solid-state NMR probes for investigating the influence of support surfaces on deposited inorganic complexes.
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