Size matters: altering the metal-surface coordination in micropores via structural confinement effects†
Abstract
Solid-state NMR experiments were used to investigate the dynamics of supported complexes grafted to a series of silica gel materials of varied pore sizes. Through dipolar recoupling measurements, we found that ligand dynamics were impeded in the more confined environments, as would be expected. A new form of motion involving the complex as a whole, however, appeared in the most restricted environment consisting of 22 Å diameter pores. These motions persisted down to −100 °C at which point the ligands were frozen on the NMR timescale. The newly observed dynamics could only result from the breaking of secondary dative metal–siloxane interactions that otherwise lock the complex in a preferred orientation on the surface. Crucially, these results show that confinement effects alone can be sufficient to reduce a grafted metal's effective coordination number in direct analogy to the synthesis of undercoordinated complexes using bulky ligands. This finding could have important implications in the synthesis of more active heterogeneous catalysts.