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Atmospheric-Pressure Conversion of CO 2 to Cyclic Carbonates over Constrained Dinuclear Iron Catalysts.

Sreenath PappuruDina ShpasserRaanan CarmieliPini ShekhterFriederike C JentoftOz M Gazit
Published in: ACS omega (2022)
The conversion of CO 2 and epoxides to cyclic carbonates over a silica-supported di-iron(III) complex having a reduced Robson macrocycle ligand system is shown to proceed at 1 atm and 80 °C, exclusively producing the cis -cyclohexene carbonate from cyclohexene oxide. We examine the effect of immobilization configuration to show that the complex grafted in a semirigid configuration catalytically outperforms the rigid, flexible configurations and even the homogeneous counterparts. Using the semirigid catalyst, we are able to obtain a TON of up to 800 and a TOF of up to 37 h -1 under 1 atm CO 2 . The catalyst is shown to be recyclable with only minor leaching and no change to product selectivity. We further examine a range of epoxides with varying electron-withdrawing/donating properties. This work highlights the benefit arising from the constraining effect of a solid surface, akin to the role of hydrogen bonds in enzyme catalysts, and the importance of correctly balancing it.
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