posted on 2018-04-06, 20:03authored byRachel C. Klet, David M. Kaphan, Cong Liu, Ce Yang, A. Jeremy Kropf, Frédéric
A. Perras, Marek Pruski, Adam S. Hock, Massimiliano Delferro
The
chemical and electronic interactions of organometallic species
with metal oxide support materials are of fundamental importance for
the development of new classes of catalytic materials. Chemisorption
of Cp*(PMe3)IrMe2 on sulfated alumina
(SA) and sulfated zirconia (SZ) led to an unexpected redox mechanism
for deuteration of the ancillary Cp* ligand. Evidence for this oxidative
mechanism was provided by studying the analogous homogeneous reactivity
of the organometallic precursors toward trityl cation ([Ph3C]+), a Lewis acid known to effect formal hydride abstraction
by one-electron oxidation followed by hydrogen abstraction. Organometallic
deuterium incorporation was found to be correlated with surface sulfate
concentration as well as the extent of dehydration under thermal activation
conditions of SA and SZ supports. Surface sulfate concentration dependence,
in conjunction with a computational study of surface electron affinity,
indicates an electron-deficient pyrosulfate species as the redox-active
moiety. These results provide further evidence for the ability of
sulfated metal oxides to participate in redox chemistry not only toward
organometallic complexes but also in the larger context of their application
as catalysts for the transformation of light alkanes.