0000000000522665

AUTHOR

Henry Chermette

CO2 as a C1-Building Block for Dialkyl Carbonate Synthesis

Carbon dioxide, one of the major man-made greenhouse gas, is a renewable resource of carbon which can be viewed as a C1 synthon to build valuable chemicals. The development of new applications is of major interest considering CO2 conversion and environmentally friendly reactions. As chemical catalysis offers interesting options, we are studying the molecular design of catalysts for the formation of dialkyl carbonates from alcohols and CO2. This paper reports results on the mechanistic approach for dialkyl carbonate formation with alkoxybutyl tin(IV) compounds. The insertion of CO2 into Sn-OR bonds (R = Me, 1Pr) occurs at atmospheric pressure and room temperature leading to alkylcarbonato ti…

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Insertion reaction of carbon dioxide into Sn-OR bond. Synthesis, structure and DFT calculations of di- and tetranuclear isopropylcarbonato tin(IV) complexes

The reaction of carbon dioxide with the stannane nBu2Sn(OiPr)2 and distannoxane [nBu2(iPrO)Sn]2O leads to the selective insertion into one Sn-OiPr bond generating the corresponding nBu2Sn(OiPr)(OCO2(i)Pr) and nBu2(iPrO)SnOSn(OCO2(i)Pr)nBu2 species. Both compounds are characterised by multinuclear NMR, FT-IR and single-crystal X-ray crystallography. In the solid state, they adopt a dimeric arrangement with bridging isopropoxy and terminal isopropylcarbonato ligands. The X-ray crystal structure of the dinuclear stannane shows that the Sn2O2 ring and the two Sn-OCO2C fragments are nearby coplanar. The same holds for the ladder-type tetranuclear distannoxane. The dimeric structures are also evi…

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From CO2 to dimethyl carbonate with dialkyldimethoxystannanes: the key role of monomeric species.

International audience; The formation of dimethyl carbonate (DMC) from CO(2) and methanol with the dimer [n-Bu(2)Sn(OCH(3))(2)](2) was investigated by experimental kinetics in support of DFT calculations. Under the reaction conditions (357-423 K, 10-20 MPa), identical initial rates are observed with three different reacting mixtures, CO(2)/toluene, supercritical CO(2), and CO(2)/methanol, and are consistent with the formation of monomeric di-n-butyltin(iv) species. An intramolecular mechanism is, therefore, proposed with an Arrhenius activation energy amounting to 104 ± 10 kJ mol(-1) for DMC synthesis. DFT calculations on the [(CH(3))(2)Sn(OCH(3))(2)](2)/CO(2) system show that the exothermi…

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Can Green Dimethyl Carbonate Synthesis be More Effective? A Catalyst Recycling Study Benefiting from Experimental Kinetics and DFT Modeling

Dibutyldimethoxystannanes are known to catalyze the reaction between carbon dioxide and methanol leading to dimethyl carbonate. Despite similarities between din-butyl- and ditert-butyldimethoxystannane, the recycled complexes have different structural features. In the din-butyl series, a decatin(IV) complex has been characterized and is less active than the stannane precursor. Kinetic experiments likely indicate that all the tin centers are not active, which is confirmed in comparing with the related dinuclear 1,3-dimethoxytetran-butyldistannoxane complex. In the ditert-butyl series, the tritin(IV) complex isolated upon recycling features the steric effect of bulky tBu ancillary ligands. In…

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Reactivity of dialkoxydibutylstannanes toward carbon dioxide: A DFT study of electronic and steric effects

Abstract DFT calculations were performed for the reaction of CO 2 with the monomeric species, R′ 2 Sn(OR) 2 , (R = R′ = CH 3 ; R = CH 3 , CH 2 CH 3 , CH(CH 3 ) 2 , R′ =  n -Bu) for assessing the role of electronic and steric effects in the kinetics and thermodynamics of CO 2 insertion into Sn–OR bonds. The reaction pathways are exothermic and involve the successive insertion into the two Sn–OR bonds. The driving force for insertion is ascribed to a charge-transfer between the HOMO of the complexes, mainly localized on the oxygen atom of the alkoxy ligands, and the LUMO of CO 2 . Interestingly enough, the energy barrier of the second insertion is much lower by around 27 kJ mol −1 , and quite…

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