Dinuclear Nickel(I) and Palladium(I) Complexes for Highly Active Transformations of Organic Compounds

In typical catalytic organic transformations, transition metals in catalytically active complexes are present in their most stable valence states, such as palladium(0) and (II). However, some dimeric monovalent metal complexes can be stabilized by auxiliary ligands to form diamagnetic compounds with...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Takahiro Inatomi, Yuji Koga, Kouki Matsubara
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-01-01
Series:Molecules
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/23/1/140
id doaj-dbedb7ec594b48f089da695f2573e644
record_format Article
spelling doaj-dbedb7ec594b48f089da695f2573e6442020-11-25T00:17:56ZengMDPI AGMolecules1420-30492018-01-0123114010.3390/molecules23010140molecules23010140Dinuclear Nickel(I) and Palladium(I) Complexes for Highly Active Transformations of Organic CompoundsTakahiro Inatomi0Yuji Koga1Kouki Matsubara2Fukuoka University, 8-19-1 Nanakuma, Fukuoka 814-0180, JapanFukuoka University, 8-19-1 Nanakuma, Fukuoka 814-0180, JapanFukuoka University, 8-19-1 Nanakuma, Fukuoka 814-0180, JapanIn typical catalytic organic transformations, transition metals in catalytically active complexes are present in their most stable valence states, such as palladium(0) and (II). However, some dimeric monovalent metal complexes can be stabilized by auxiliary ligands to form diamagnetic compounds with metal–metal bonding interactions. These diamagnetic compounds can act as catalysts while retaining their dimeric forms, split homolytically or heterolytically into monomeric forms, which usually have high activity, or in contrast, become completely deactivated as catalysts. Recently, many studies using group 10 metal complexes containing nickel and palladium have demonstrated that under specific conditions, the active forms of these catalyst precursors are not mononuclear zerovalent complexes, but instead dinuclear monovalent metal complexes. In this mini-review, we have surveyed the preparation, reactivity, and the catalytic processes of dinuclear nickel(I) and palladium(I) complexes, focusing on mechanistic insights into the precatalyst activation systems and the structure and behavior of nickel and palladium intermediates.http://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/23/1/140monovalent nickelmonovalent palladiumdinuclear complexescatalytic processDFT calculations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Takahiro Inatomi
Yuji Koga
Kouki Matsubara
spellingShingle Takahiro Inatomi
Yuji Koga
Kouki Matsubara
Dinuclear Nickel(I) and Palladium(I) Complexes for Highly Active Transformations of Organic Compounds
Molecules
monovalent nickel
monovalent palladium
dinuclear complexes
catalytic process
DFT calculations
author_facet Takahiro Inatomi
Yuji Koga
Kouki Matsubara
author_sort Takahiro Inatomi
title Dinuclear Nickel(I) and Palladium(I) Complexes for Highly Active Transformations of Organic Compounds
title_short Dinuclear Nickel(I) and Palladium(I) Complexes for Highly Active Transformations of Organic Compounds
title_full Dinuclear Nickel(I) and Palladium(I) Complexes for Highly Active Transformations of Organic Compounds
title_fullStr Dinuclear Nickel(I) and Palladium(I) Complexes for Highly Active Transformations of Organic Compounds
title_full_unstemmed Dinuclear Nickel(I) and Palladium(I) Complexes for Highly Active Transformations of Organic Compounds
title_sort dinuclear nickel(i) and palladium(i) complexes for highly active transformations of organic compounds
publisher MDPI AG
series Molecules
issn 1420-3049
publishDate 2018-01-01
description In typical catalytic organic transformations, transition metals in catalytically active complexes are present in their most stable valence states, such as palladium(0) and (II). However, some dimeric monovalent metal complexes can be stabilized by auxiliary ligands to form diamagnetic compounds with metal–metal bonding interactions. These diamagnetic compounds can act as catalysts while retaining their dimeric forms, split homolytically or heterolytically into monomeric forms, which usually have high activity, or in contrast, become completely deactivated as catalysts. Recently, many studies using group 10 metal complexes containing nickel and palladium have demonstrated that under specific conditions, the active forms of these catalyst precursors are not mononuclear zerovalent complexes, but instead dinuclear monovalent metal complexes. In this mini-review, we have surveyed the preparation, reactivity, and the catalytic processes of dinuclear nickel(I) and palladium(I) complexes, focusing on mechanistic insights into the precatalyst activation systems and the structure and behavior of nickel and palladium intermediates.
topic monovalent nickel
monovalent palladium
dinuclear complexes
catalytic process
DFT calculations
url http://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/23/1/140
work_keys_str_mv AT takahiroinatomi dinuclearnickeliandpalladiumicomplexesforhighlyactivetransformationsoforganiccompounds
AT yujikoga dinuclearnickeliandpalladiumicomplexesforhighlyactivetransformationsoforganiccompounds
AT koukimatsubara dinuclearnickeliandpalladiumicomplexesforhighlyactivetransformationsoforganiccompounds
_version_ 1725377503956041728