Issue 2, 2013

Halide bridged trinuclear rhodium complexes and their inhibiting influence on catalysis

Abstract

The addition of halides to the cationic solvate complexes of the type [Rh(PP)(solvent)2][anion] leads to the formation of trinuclear μ3-halide-bridged complexes. The corresponding complexes [Rh3(PP)3(μ3-X)2][BF4] with X = Cl or Br and diphosphines PP Me-DuPHOS, Et-DuPHOS, DIPAMP, t-Bu-BisP* and Tangphos were characterized – in most cases – also by X-ray analysis. By reducing the concentration of the active catalyst, the in situ formation of these μ-halide-bridged multinuclear complexes in catalytic reactions leads to a decrease in activity or even to a total inactivity. The required halides – in most cases chloride – are usually present as impurities in the substrates (also when produced industrially). The extent of deactivation, known from enzyme catalysis as competitive inhibition, depends on several factors: the type of halide, the ratio of stability constants of multinuclear halide complexes and of substrate complexes, and the concentration of halide and substrate in solution.

Graphical abstract: Halide bridged trinuclear rhodium complexes and their inhibiting influence on catalysis

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Aug 2012
Accepted
21 Sep 2012
First published
26 Sep 2012

Catal. Sci. Technol., 2013,3, 462-468

Halide bridged trinuclear rhodium complexes and their inhibiting influence on catalysis

A. Preetz, C. Kohrt, A. Meißner, S. Wei, H. Drexler, H. Buschmann and D. Heller, Catal. Sci. Technol., 2013, 3, 462 DOI: 10.1039/C2CY20591B

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