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Rhodium-Catalyzed Acrylate Synthesis from Carbon Dioxide and Ethylene by using a Guanidine-Based Pincer Ligand: Perturbing Occupied d-Orbitals by pπ-dπ Repulsion Makes a Difference.

Shinnosuke TakegasaMing Min LeeKei TokuhiroRyo NakanoMakoto Yamashita
Published in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2022)
Rhodium-catalyzed acrylate synthesis from CO 2 and ethylene was accomplished by using a guanidine-based NCN pincer ligand. The repulsion between pπ-electron of guanidine sidearms and occupied dπ orbital of rhodium center raised the level of d-electrons close to those of formerly known d 8 -ruthenium catalyst, thereby promoting the metallalactone formation from carbon dioxide and ethylene. This work fills the absence of group-9 metal based catalyst for the acrylate synthesis and provides a designing approach for pincer-ligated d 8 -metal catalysts to utilize pπ-dπ interaction for promoting desirable redox processes.
Keyphrases
  • carbon dioxide
  • room temperature
  • highly efficient
  • density functional theory
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  • electron transfer