Cobalt(I) Pincer Complexes as Catalysts for CO2 Hydrogenation to Formate

22 April 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Carbon dioxide hydrogenation with base to generate formate salts can provide a means of storing hydrogen in an energy dense solid. The stored hydrogen can later be released upon acidification of the formate salts or formic acid can be used directly in fuel cells. However, this application requires catalytic CO2 hydrogenation, which would ideally use an earth abundant metal as the catalyst. In this article, six new (CNC)CoIL2 pincer complexes were synthesized and fully characterized, including single crystal X-Ray diffraction analysis on four new complexes. These complexes contain an imidazole-based (1R) N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ring or a benzimidazole based NHC ring (2R) in the CNC pincer. The R group is para to N on the pyridine ring and been varied from electron withdrawing (CF3) to donating (Me, OMe) substituents. The L type ligands have included CO and phosphine ligands (in PPh32 and PMe32). Thus, two known Co complexes (1, 1OMe) and six new complexes (1Me, 1CF3, 2, 2OMe, PPh32, PMe32) were studied for the CO2 hydrogenation reaction. In general, the unsubstituted CNC pincer complexes bearing two carbonyl ligands led to the highest activity. The best catalyst, 2, remains active for over 16 h and produces a turnover number of 39,800 with 20 bars of 1:1 CO2 / H2 mixture at 60 °C.

Keywords

N-heterocyclic carbenes
carbon dioxide reduction
pincer ligands
Cobalt(I)
hydrogenation

Supplementary materials

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