C–N Bond Formation from Co-Conversion of N2 and CO2 Mediated by Nb2OH4– Cluster Anions: Importance of Hydride Ligands
Abstract
Constructing C–N bonds directly from N2 and CO2 is highly desirable but challenging. Although metal hydrides show promise in N2 activation and functionalization with CO2, their precise role in selectively facilitating C–N coupling remains unclear. Herein, we report the C–N bond formation in the co-conversion of N2 and CO2 mediated by a dinuclear metal hydride cluster Nb2OH4⁻ employing mass spectrometry and quantum chemistry calculations. The key intermediate Nb2OH2N2⁻, derived from the preliminary reaction of Nb2OH4⁻ with N2, could react with CO2 to form the C–N bond, as evidenced by the detection of fragment ions (NC⁻ and NCO⁻). Mechanistic studies indicate that hydride ligands modulate the electronic structure of metal centers by weakening the reducing ability and enabling moderated CO2 activation that favors C–N coupling over CO2 reduction. The work elucidates how controlled metal hydride formation governs electronic structure and reaction pathways, establishing a general design principle for achieving selective N2–CO2 coupling and direct C–N bond construction.
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