Atomically Precise, Thiolated Copper–Hydride Nanoclusters as Single-Site Hydrogenation Catalysts for Ketones in Mild Conditions
Author(s) -
Cunfa Sun,
Nisha Mammen,
Sami Kaappa,
Peng Yuan,
Guocheng Deng,
Chaowei Zhao,
Juanzhu Yan,
Sami Malola,
Karoliina Honkala,
Hannu Häkkinen,
Boon K. Teo,
Nanfeng Zheng
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs nano
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.554
H-Index - 382
eISSN - 1936-086X
pISSN - 1936-0851
DOI - 10.1021/acsnano.9b02052
Subject(s) - catalysis , nanomaterial based catalyst , hydride , nanoclusters , copper , hydroamination , chemistry , ligand (biochemistry) , materials science , combinatorial chemistry , metal , organic chemistry , biochemistry , receptor
Copper-hydrides are known catalysts for several technologically important reactions such as hydrogenation of CO, hydroamination of alkenes and alkynes, and chemoselective hydrogenation of unsaturated ketones to unsaturated alcohols. Stabilizing copper-based particles by ligand chemistry to nanometer scale is an appealing route to make active catalysts with optimized material economy; however, it has been long believed that the ligand-metal interface, particularly if sulfur-containing thiols are used as stabilizing agent, may poison the catalyst. We report here a discovery of an ambient-stable thiolate-protected copper-hydride nanocluster [Cu 25 H 10 (SPhCl 2 ) 18 ] 3- that readily catalyzes hydrogenation of ketones to alcohols in mild conditions. A full experimental and theoretical characterization of its atomic and electronic structure shows that the 10 hydrides are instrumental for the stability of the nanocluster and are in an active role being continuously consumed and replenished in the hydrogenation reaction. Density functional theory computations suggest, backed up by the experimental evidence, that the hydrogenation takes place only around a single site of the 10 hydride locations, rendering the [Cu 25 H 10 (SPhCl 2 ) 18 ] 3- one of the first nanocatalysts whose structure and catalytic functions are characterized fully to atomic precision. Understanding of a working catalyst at the atomistic level helps to optimize its properties and provides fundamental insights into the controversial issue of how a stable, ligand-passivated, metal-containing nanocluster can be at the same time an active catalyst.
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