Liberation of carbon monoxide from formic acid mediated by molybdenum oxyanions.

Dalton Trans

School of Chemistry and Bio21 Molecular Science and Biotechnology Institute, University of Melbourne, 30 Flemington Rd, Parkville, Victoria 3010, Australia.

Published: November 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how molybdate anions can catalyze the selective decarbonylation of formic acid through a two-step catalytic cycle involving ion-molecule reactions and collision-induced dissociation.
  • In the first step, molybdate anions react with formic acid to create coordinated formates and hydroxide, while the second step sees these formates undergo decarbonylation, regenerating the original molybdate anions.
  • DFT calculations reveal that the dimolybdate anion is more selective for decarbonylation over decarboxylation compared to the monomolybdate, supporting experimental findings regarding reaction pathways.

Article Abstract

Multistage mass spectrometry experiments, isotope labelling and DFT calculations were used to explore whether selective decarbonylation of formic acid could be mediated by molybdate anions [(MoO)(OH)] ( = 1 and 2) a formal catalytic cycle involving two steps. In step 1, both molybdate anions undergo gas-phase ion-molecule reactions (IMR) with formic acid to produce the coordinated formates [(MoO)(OCH)] and HO. In step 2, both coordinated formates [(MoO)(OCH)] undergo decarbonylation under collision-induced dissociation (CID) conditions to reform the molybdate anions [(MoO)(OH)] ( = 1 and 2), thus closing a formal catalytic cycle. In the case of [MoO(OCH)] an additional decarboxylation channel also occurs to yield [MoO(H)], which is unreactive towards formic acid. The reaction between [MoO(OH)] and formic acid gives rise to [MoO(OCH)] highlighting that ligand substitution occurs without O/O exchange between the coordinated OH ligand and HCOH. The reaction between [(MoO)(OD)] ( = 1 and 2) and DCOH initially produces [(MoO)(OH)] ( = 1 and 2), indicating that D/H exchange occurs. DFT calculations were carried out to investigate the reaction mechanisms and energetics associated with both steps of the formal catalytic cycle and to better understand the competition between decarbonylation and decarboxylation, which is crucial in developing a selective catalyst. The CO and CO loss channels from the monomolybdate anion [MoO(OCH)] have similar barrier heights which is in agreement with experimental results where both fragmentation channels are observed. In contrast, the dimolybdate anion is more selective, since the decarbonylation pathway of [(MoO)(OCH)] is both kinetically and thermodynamically favoured, which agrees with experimental observations where the CO loss channel is solely observed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3dt01983gDOI Listing

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