Mechanism, selectivity, and what prevents closure of the catalytic cycle for H2 reduction of CO2 promoted by a heterodinuclear zirconium–iridium complex
Abstract
Dinuclear metal–metal cooperative effects hold promise for activation and functionalization of small molecules. Perhaps one of the most important targets of transition metal heterodinuclear bond activation and functionalization is the reaction between CO2 and H2. Bergman and coworkers reported a heterodinuclear Zr–Ir complex that promotes the activation and functionalization of CO2 with H2 at low temperature and pressure. Here we report the use of density functional theory calculations to determine the reaction mechanism, reactivity, and selectivity of this heterodinuclear promoted reaction. The Zr–Ir complex has surprisingly low barriers for activation of both CO2 and H2, and molecular dynamics trajectories show that CO2 activation is a concerted, one-step process. The H2 activation transition state is lower in energy than CO2 activation and therefore when H2 is added first or when they are added together formate is generated through a reactive Zr–H intermediate. The lack of catalytic turnover is only the result of unfavorable thermodynamics, not kinetic barriers, where the metal bound formate and Ir–H is favored compared to the release of formic acid and reforming the Zr–Ir dinuclear complex. Overall, these calculations point towards possible system changes that could enable catalysis.

Please wait while we load your content...