A comprehensive density functional theory investigation has been carried out to unravel the complete mechanistic landscape of aqueous-phase formic acid dehydrogenation (FAD) catalyzed by a pyridyl-imidazoline-based Mn(I) catalyst [Mn(PY-IM)(CO)Br], which was recently reported by Beller and co-workers. The computed free energy profiles show that for the production of a Mn-formate intermediate [)], a stepwise mechanism is both kinetically and thermodynamically favorable compared to the concerted mechanism. This stepwise mechanism involves the dissociation of a Br ion from a Mn-bromide complex [] to create a vacant site and coordination of water solvent to this vacant site, followed by the dissociative exchange of the aqua ligand with the formate ion to form . Non-covalent interaction analysis revealed that the steric hindrance at the transition state is the cardinal reason for the preference to a stepwise mechanism. The β-hydride elimination process was estimated to be the rate-determining step with a barrier of 19.0 kcal/mol. This confirms the experimental observation. The generation of a dihydrogen-bound complex was found to occur through the protonation of Mn-hydride by a hydronium ion instead of formic acid. The mechanistic details and insights presented in this work would promote future catalytic designing and exploration of earth-abundant Mn-based catalytic systems for potential applications toward FAD.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.1c00757 | DOI Listing |
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