Issue 23, 2021

Tuning metal–metal interactions for cooperative small molecule activation

Abstract

Cluster complexes have attracted interest for decades due to their promise of drawing analogies to metallic surfaces and metalloenzyme active sites, but only recently have chemists started to develop ligand scaffolds that are specifically designed to support multinuclear transition metal cores. Such ligands not only hold multiple metal centers in close proximity but also allow for fine-tuning of their electronic structures and surrounding steric environments. This Feature Article highlights ligand designs that allow for cooperative small molecule activation at cluster complexes, with a particular focus on complexes that contain metal–metal bonds. Two useful ligand-design elements have emerged from this work: a degree of geometric flexibility, which allows for novel small molecule activation modes, and the use of redox-active ligands to provide electronic flexibility to the cluster core. The authors have incorporated these factors into a unique class of dinucleating macrocycles (nPDI2). Redox-active fragments in nPDI2 mimic the weak-overlap covalent bonding that is characteristic of M–M interactions, and aliphatic linkers in the ligand backbone provide geometric flexibility, allowing for interconversion between a range of geometries as the dinuclear core responds to the requirements of various small molecule substrates. The union of these design elements appears to be a powerful combination for analogizing critical aspects of heterogeneous and metalloenzyme catalysts.

Graphical abstract: Tuning metal–metal interactions for cooperative small molecule activation

Article information

Article type
Feature Article
Submitted
25 Nov 2020
Accepted
17 Feb 2021
First published
24 Feb 2021

Chem. Commun., 2021,57, 2839-2853

Author version available

Tuning metal–metal interactions for cooperative small molecule activation

Q. Wang, S. H. Brooks, T. Liu and N. C. Tomson, Chem. Commun., 2021, 57, 2839 DOI: 10.1039/D0CC07721F

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