Issue 48, 2023

On the use of NMR distance measurements for assessing surface site homogeneity

Abstract

The past few decades have seen tremendous growth in the area of single-site heterogeneous catalysis, which aims to combine the best aspects of homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis, namely molecular-level site control and ease of separation/recycling. Despite this, we still do not have a means of assessing site homogeneity and whether the produced catalyst is indeed a “single-site”. Recent developments have enabled the use of NMR-based distance measurements to determine the conformations and configurations of surface sites, leading to the question whether such measurements can be used to distinguish materials containing either single or multiple surface sites with otherwise indistinguishable NMR properties. We describe a Monte Carlo-based multi-structure search algorithm and its application to the determination of multi-site structures from supported metal complexes. The sensitivity of REDOR data to the existence of multiple sites is assessed using synthetic data and prior literature examples are revisited to determine whether the single-site approximation was indeed appropriate. We lastly apply this new methodology to differentiate the configurations of zirconocene complexes grafted onto alumina supports that were thermally treated at different temperatures.

Graphical abstract: On the use of NMR distance measurements for assessing surface site homogeneity

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 Sep 2023
Accepted
16 Nov 2023
First published
17 Nov 2023

Dalton Trans., 2023,52, 18502-18512

On the use of NMR distance measurements for assessing surface site homogeneity

F. A. Perras and D. B. Culver, Dalton Trans., 2023, 52, 18502 DOI: 10.1039/D3DT03201A

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