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RESEARCH PRODUCT

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

Henry ChermetteStéphane ChambreyDanielle Ballivet-tkatchenkoMahboubeh Poor Kalhor

subject

Reaction mechanismDimerInorganic chemistryGeneral Physics and AstronomyCATALYSTSActivation energy010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesMedicinal chemistryHOMOGENEOUS HYDROGENATIONCatalysischemistry.chemical_compoundsymbols.namesake[CHIM.ANAL]Chemical Sciences/Analytical chemistryReactivity (chemistry)Physical and Theoretical ChemistryCOORDINATION CHEMISTRYCOPOLYMERIZATIONCHALLENGES010405 organic chemistryOXIDEREACTIVITY0104 chemical sciencesGibbs free energy[CHIM.THEO]Chemical Sciences/Theoretical and/or physical chemistrychemistryIntramolecular force[ CHIM.THEO ] Chemical Sciences/Theoretical and/or physical chemistrysymbols[ CHIM.ANAL ] Chemical Sciences/Analytical chemistryMETAL-COMPLEXESDimethyl carbonateEPOXIDESDIOXIDE

description

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 exothermic insertion of CO(2) into the Sn-OCH(3) bond occurs by a concerted Lewis acid-base interaction involving the tin center and the oxygen atom of the methoxy ligand. The Gibbs energy diagrams highlight that, under the reaction conditions, the dimer-monomer equilibrium is significantly shifted towards monomeric species, in agreement with the experimental kinetics. Importantly, the two Sn-OCH(3) bonds are prompt to insert CO(2). These results provide new insight into the reaction mechanism and catalyst design to enhance the turnover numbers.

10.1039/c0cp02089chttps://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00877433