Abstract
Whereas molybdenum dinitrogen complexes have played a major role as catalytic model systems of nitrogenase, corresponding tungsten complexes have in most cases found to be catalytically inactive. Herein we present a modified pentadentate tetrapodal (pentaPod) phosphine ligand in which two dimethylphosphine groups of the original PMe2PPh2 ligand have been replaced with phospholanes (Pln). The derived molybdenum complex [Mo(N2)(PPln2PPPh2)] generates 22 and the analogous tungsten complex [W(N2)(PPln2PPPh2)] 7 equivalents of NH3 from N2 in the presence of 180 equiv.s of SmI2/H2O, rendering the latter the first tungsten complex chemocatalytically converting N2 to NH3. In contrast, the parent tungsten complex [W(N2)(PMe2PPh2)] generates ammonia from N2 only in a slightly overstoichiometric fashion. The reasons for these reactivity differences are investigated with the help of spectroscopic and electrochemical methods.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Info to manuscript
Description
Synthesis, NMR spectra, IR spectra, Raman spectra and cyclovoltammograms, informations on catalysis
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Title
Checkcif file compound 10
Description
X-ray structure data compound 10
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