Mechanistic studies in catalysis

John M. Brown a, Andreas Pfaltz b and Rutger A. van Santen c
aChemistry Research Laboratory, University of Oxford, 12 Mansfield Road, Oxford OX1 3TA, UK. E-mail: john.brown@chem.ox.ac.uk
bDepartment of Chemistry, University of Basel, St. Johanns-Ring 19, CH-4056 Basel, Switzerland. E-mail: andreas.pfaltz@unibas.ch
cSchuit Institute of Catalysis, Laboratory of Inorganic Materials Chemistry, Eindhoven University of Technology, P. O. Box 513, 5600 MB Eindhoven, The Netherlands. E-mail: r.a.v.santen@tue.nl

Received 8th August 2014 , Accepted 8th August 2014
Part of the mission statement of Catalysis Science & Technology (CST) offers a “balanced mix of applied fundamental experimental and computational research”. Elsewhere the stated aim is to provide an inclusive penumbra for all areas of catalysis – given the sheer size and reach of the subject this is a highly challenging objective. There may have been tendencies in the past for different sub-disciplines of catalysis to be insulated from one another and it is encouraging to see artificial barriers gradually breaking down. A journal that all the sub-disciplines of catalysis can share comfortably will only help to accelerate the process; a quick glance down the title list of any recent issue of CST will reinforce that conclusion. It is the scientific community rather than the publisher that decides the fate of a new journal and for CST a portfolio of well over 3000 pages in 2013 – only the third year of publication – provides a very positive statement.

Understanding how catalytic reactions work is an inseparable component of the science, and a necessary adjunct to progress. Techniques used in one area help cross-fertilize others. We are pleased to present a set of papers that reflect the aims and intentions of the journal, and warmly thank the individual authors for their contributions. There are two perspective articles; Morris and Sonnenberg (10.1039/c4cy00468j) call on their experience in iron-complex catalysis to evaluate the ways that homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis (e.g. by nanoparticles) can be distinguished experimentally, and Schmidt and his colleagues (10.1039/c4cy00479e) consider selectivity in competitive catalytic reactions, showing that their analyses complement rate studies. Heller and co-workers (10.1039/c4cy00497c) focus on the precatalysts involved in rhodium asymmetric hydrogenation and the effects that operate during catalytic turnover in their mini-review. The Fischer–Tropsch reaction is topical, and De Chen, Holmen and co-workers (10.1039/c4cy00566j) combine DFT and experimental studies to elucidate the less desirable pathways leading to methane; Hensen and co-workers (10.1039/c4cy00709c) study reactions in aqueous media with Ru nanoparticles as catalyst, concentrating on the balance between hydrocarbons and oxygen-containing products. In detailed studies of heterogeneous catalytic oxidation, Fouladvand and co-workers (10.1039/c4cy00486h) utilise diffuse reflectance FT IR to monitor the evolution of surface species on Pt in methane oxidation; Muhler's group (10.1039/c4cy00493k) use MS to study the oxidation of ethanal on Au/TiO2 and find a gold-free pathway at high temperatures. Organocatalysis is represented by Blackmond and Ji (10.1039/c4cy00648h), through their study of the enantioselective urea-catalyzed addition of disubstituted aldehyde enolates to nitroalkenes where there is the potential for reversibility, and thus lowered ee. Nguyen and co-workers (10.1039/c4cy00480a) demonstrate complexation of CO2 to guanidines when the latter are used to catalyze cycloaddition to amino-alkynes. Pidko's group (10.1039/c4cy00568f) finds a very effective pincer-Ru catalyst for CO2 hydrogenation, and they demonstrate the importance of an RuH2 intermediate. Fairlamb and co-workers (10.1039/c4cy00617h) have studied Au-complex catalysed enyne cyclizations with a view to defining the oxidation state of Au during turnover. McIndoe, Weller and their respective groups (10.1039/c4cy00597j) have used direct ES-MS interrogation of reacting systems to probe the Rh(Xantphos)-catalysed hydroboration of neohexene by amine-boranes. Finally, a novel use of catalysis is reported by Duckett et al. (10.1039/c4cy00464g). Their SABRE method uses the reversible co-complexation of para-H2 and ligands to Ir, such that the free ligand in equilibrium has a very significantly enhanced 1H NMR.

Overall the contributions nicely reflect the wide spectrum of current mechanistic problems in homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis and the diverse methods applied to solve them.


This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2014
Click here to see how this site uses Cookies. View our privacy policy here.