Issue 17, 2011

Supramolecular ligand–ligand and ligand–substrate interactions for highly selective transition metal catalysis

Abstract

The use of non covalent supramolecular ligand–ligand and ligand–substrate interactions in transition metal-catalysed transformations is a new, rapidly emerging area of research. Non-covalent interactions between monodentate ligands such as hydrogen bonding, coordinative bonding, ion pairing, π–π interactions and the formation of inclusion compounds, have been shown to impart higher activity and chemo-, regio-, and stereoselectivity to the corresponding transition metal complexes in a number of catalytic applications. Analogously, supramolecular ligand–substrate interactions, and particularly hydrogen bonding, have been used to direct the regio- and stereochemistry of several metal-catalysed reactions. The catalytic systems relying on supramolecular interactions are generally capable of self-assembling from simpler components in the environment where catalysis is to take place, and are therefore very well-suited for combinatorial catalyst discovery strategies and high-throughput screening.

Graphical abstract: Supramolecular ligand–ligand and ligand–substrate interactions for highly selective transition metal catalysis

Article information

Article type
Perspective
Submitted
02 Nov 2010
Accepted
21 Dec 2010
First published
17 Feb 2011

Dalton Trans., 2011,40, 4355-4373

Supramolecular ligand–ligand and ligand–substrate interactions for highly selective transition metal catalysis

S. Carboni, C. Gennari, L. Pignataro and U. Piarulli, Dalton Trans., 2011, 40, 4355 DOI: 10.1039/C0DT01517B

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