4.5 Article

Unexpected coordination behavior of ruthenium to a polymeric a-diimine containing the poly[bis(arylimino)acenaphthene] fragment

Journal

INORGANICA CHIMICA ACTA
Volume 518, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.ica.2021.120257

Keywords

N-ligands; Schiff bases; Polymeric ligands; Ruthenium; Heterogenized catalysts

Funding

  1. Universit`a degli Studi di Milano

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The use of polymer-immobilized catalysts can enhance recovery efficiency but may also lead to reduced catalytic activity. By adjusting the structure of the polymer, a balance between catalytic activity and recovery efficiency can be achieved.
Use of homogeneous catalysts poses the problem of their recovery at the end of the reaction. A possible strategy to circumvent this problem is to make the ligand part of a polymer with limited solubility. In this work, we investigated the immobilization of complexes of Ar-BIAN ligands (Ar-BIAN = bis(arylimido)acenaphthene). We employed 4,4'-methylene-bis(aniline) as an amine able to bridge two acenaphthene moieties. However, the obtained product was a mixture of short-chain oligomers. A ruthenium complex of this mixture (Oligo-BIAN) was indeed catalytically active in the model hydrogenation of nitrobenzene to aniline by CO/H2O but the complexes were too soluble in the reaction mixture to allow for an easy recovery. We thus further extended the molecular weight of Oligo-BIAN by polymerizing it with terephthaloyl chloride obtaining a polyamide (Poly-BIAN). The latter was insoluble in all solvents but its ruthenium complex was catalytically inactive in the model reaction. An deeper investigation, showed that coordination mode of monomeric Ar-BIAN ligands and Oligo-BIAN to [Ru (CO)(3)Cl-2(THF)] is differs from that of Poly-BIAN. This result was completely unexpected and constitutes a general warning not to give for granted the coordination mode of a complex to a functionalized polymer.

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