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Transition metal complexes supported

Chemistry of transition metal complexes supported by hydrotris(pyrazolyl) borates and chemistry of dioxygen complexes based on these ligands 99YGK619. [Pg.252]

NMR (CeDg, 125.7 MHz, 25°C) 139.8, 132.5, 128.8-129.1 (overlapping resonances), 124.6, 17.0 (br). B NMR (CgDg, 128.3 MHz, 25°C) -10.96 ppm. The compound is a versatile precursor to a wide range of transition metal complexes supported by the tris(phosphino)borate ligand. It is air- and water-stable for extended periods, and, unlike the lithium and ammonium salts of [PhB(CH2PPh2)3] , it is both soluble and stable in chloroform and dichloromethane for days, making these useful solvents available for subsequent trans-metallation chemistry. [Pg.13]

Schuchardt U, Dos Santos EN, Santos Dias F (1989) Butadiene oligomerization and telomerization catalyzed by transition metal complexes supported on organic polymers. J Mol Catal 55 340-352... [Pg.98]

In contrast to groups 4 and 5 transition metal complexes supported on silica, the treatment by H2 of W surface organometallic derivatives, namely, [(=SiO)W( C Bu)(CH2 Bu)2] and [(=SiO)2W( C Bu)(CH2 Bu)], mainly lead to sintering (re-formation of silanols and detection of W particles by transmission electron microscopy (TEM)) and the hydride is obtained only in minute amounts. On the other hand, [(AlsO)W( C Bu)(CH2 Bu)2] reacts with H2 to give tungsten hydride species [(AlsO)2W(H) .] with no evidence of sintering, as evidenced by the presence of W-H and Al-H bands in the IR spectrum (Scheme 46). ... [Pg.530]

In catalysis involving transition metal complexes supported on polymers it is recognized that the chemical and physical structure of the polymeric matrix can have a large effect on the performance of the catalyst. Table XI presents several different polymeric matrixes that are used for this application. [Pg.392]

Apparently, halogeno-transition-metal complexes supported on phosphine-modified silica carriers are more active than their homogeneous counterparts by a factor of 2—4 orders of magnitude, as measured by their effectiveness on the hydrogenation of cyclohexene. ... [Pg.2]

Carbon monoxide [630-08-0] (qv), CO, the most important 7T-acceptor ligand, forms a host of neutral, anionic, and cationic transition-metal complexes. There is at least one known type of carbonyl derivative for every transition metal, as well as evidence supporting the existence of the carbonyls of some lanthanides (qv) and actinides (1) (see AcTINIDES AND THANSACTINIDES COORDINATION COMPOUNDS). [Pg.62]

In comparison with traditional biphasic catalysis using water, fluorous phases, or polar organic solvents, transition metal catalysis in ionic liquids represents a new and advanced way to combine the specific advantages of homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis. In many applications, the use of a defined transition metal complex immobilized on a ionic liquid support has already shown its unique potential. Many more successful examples - mainly in fine chemical synthesis - can be expected in the future as our loiowledge of ionic liquids and their interactions with transition metal complexes increases. [Pg.253]

Ionic liquids have already been demonstrated to be effective membrane materials for gas separation when supported within a porous polymer support. However, supported ionic liquid membranes offer another versatile approach by which to perform two-phase catalysis. This technology combines some of the advantages of the ionic liquid as a catalyst solvent with the ruggedness of the ionic liquid-polymer gels. Transition metal complexes based on palladium or rhodium have been incorporated into gas-permeable polymer gels composed of [BMIM][PFg] and poly(vinyli-dene fluoride)-hexafluoropropylene copolymer and have been used to investigate the hydrogenation of propene [21]. [Pg.266]

Experimentally, spin-allowed d-d bands (we use the quotation marks again) are observed with intensities perhaps 100 times larger than spin-forbidden ones but still a few orders of magnitude (say, two) less intense than fully allowed transitions. This weakness of the d-d bands, alluded to in Chapter 2, is a most important pointer to the character of the d orbitals in transition-metal complexes. It directly implies that the admixture between d and p metal functions is small. Now a ligand function can be expressed as a sum of metal-centred orbitals also (see Box 4-1). The weakness of the d-d bands also implies that that portion of any ligand function which looks like a p orbital when expanded onto the metal is small also. Overall, therefore, the great extent to which d-d bands do satisfy Laporte s rule entirely supports our proposition in Chapter 2 that the d orbitals in Werner-type complexes are relatively well isolated (or decoupled or unmixed) from the valence shell of s and/or p functions. [Pg.66]

All mechanisms proposed in Scheme 7 start from the common hypotheses that the coordinatively unsaturated Cr(II) site initially adsorbs one, two, or three ethylene molecules via a coordinative d-7r bond (left column in Scheme 7). Supporting considerations about the possibility of coordinating up to three ethylene molecules come from Zecchina et al. [118], who recently showed that Cr(II) is able to adsorb and trimerize acetylene, giving benzene. Concerning the oxidation state of the active chromium sites, it is important to notice that, although the Cr(II) form of the catalyst can be considered as active , in all the proposed reactions the metal formally becomes Cr(IV) as it is converted into the active site. These hypotheses are supported by studies of the interaction of molecular transition metal complexes with ethylene [119,120]. Groppo et al. [66] have recently reported that the XANES feature at 5996 eV typical of Cr(II) species is progressively eroded upon in situ ethylene polymerization. [Pg.25]

The release of N2 occurs within function 3. It involves the dissociation of NO (via a dinitrosyl-adsorbed intermediate), followed by subsequent formation of N2 and scavenging of the adsorbed oxygen species left from NO dissociation. The removal of adsorbed oxygen is due to the total oxidation of an activated reductant (CxHyOz). This reaction corresponds to a supported homogeneous catalytic process involving a surface transition metal complex. The corresponding catalytic sequence of elementary steps occurs in the coordinative sphere of the metal cation. [Pg.145]

The band at 1600 cm-1 due to a double-bond stretch shows that chemisorbed ethylene is olefinic C—H stretching bands above 3000 cm-1 support this view. Interaction of an olefin with a surface with appreciable heat suggests 7r-bonding is involved. Powell and Sheppard (4-1) have noted that the spectrum of olefins in 7r-bonded transition metal complexes appears to involve fundamentals similar to those of the free olefin. Two striking differences occur. First, infrared forbidden bands for the free olefin become allowed for the lower symmetry complex second, the fundamentals of ethylene corresponding to v and v% shift much more than the other fundamentals. In Table III we compare the fundamentals observed for liquid ethylene (42) and a 7r-complex (43) to those observed for chemisorbed ethylene. Two points are clear from Table III. First, bands forbidden in the IR for gaseous ethylene are observed for chemisorbed ethyl-... [Pg.21]

Even if the ionic liquid is not directly involved in creating the active catalytic species, a co-catalytic interaction between the ionic liquid solvent and the dissolved transition metal complex often takes place and can result in significant catalyst activation. When a catalyst complex is, for example, dissolved in a slightly acidic ionic liquid some electron-rich parts of the complex (e.g., lone pairs of electrons in the ligand) may interact with the solvent, providing increased activity to the resulting catalytic centre. Acidic ionic liquids can be considered as liquid acid supports for transition metal catalysts dissolved therein. [Pg.189]

Some general reviews on hydrogenation using transition metal complexes that have appeared within the last five years are listed (4-7), as well as general reviews on asymmetric hydrogenation (8-10) and some dealing specifically with chiral rhodium-phosphine catalysts (11-13). The topic of catalysis by supported transition metal complexes has also been well reviewed (6, 14-29), and reviews on molecular metal cluster systems, that include aspects of catalytic hydrogenations, have appeared (30-34). [Pg.321]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.183 ]




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Polymer supported transition metal complexes

Supported Transition Metal Complexes as Catalysts

Supported complexes

Supported metal complexes

Supported transition metal complex catalysts

Supported transition metal complex catalysts hydroformylation

Supported transition metal complex catalysts hydrogenation

Supported transition metal complex catalysts hydrosilylation

Supported transition metal complex catalysts mechanism

Supported transition metal complex catalysts polymerization

Supported transition metal complex catalysts selectivity

Supported transition metal complex catalysts specificity

Supramolecular Features of Polyoxometalate-Supported Transition-Metal Complexes

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