Application of Manganese Pincer Complexes for Hydrogenation and Dehydrogenation Reactions
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On the way towards sustainable and green chemistry, scientists found a key technology which allows
chemical transformations to proceed with minimum waste generation and energy consumption. The key is
transition metal catalysis which is also attractive from an economical point of view. At the end of 19th
century, Alfred Werner defined basics of coordination chemistry which were significant for the
development of transition metal catalysis. In the 1930s, the Oxo Process, in which olefins react with syngas
to produce linear and branched aldehydes, was developed by Otto Roelen. The reaction is still widely
used and allows to produce millions metric tons of oxo chemicals. A following milestone in transition metal
catalysis occurred in the 1950s when the Wacker Process was developed. The reaction allows to oxidize
olefins to aldehydes and ketones with the use of PdCl2 as catalyst. Many other reactions were developed
involving transition metal catalysis, including important processes such as C-C bond formations, site
selective C-H bond activation, arylation of amines and alcohols and others which have been also applied in
industrial processes to obtain bulk chemicals, fine chemicals and polymers. Another indicator highlighting
the importance of homogeneous transition metal catalysis is the acknowledgement by the Noble Prize
committee. Thus, in 2001, the Nobel Prize in chemistry was awarded jointly to William S. Knowles, Ryoji
Noyori and K. Barry Sharpless for their work on transition metal catalysed asymmetric hydrogenation and
oxidation reactions. Later in 2005, Yves 0Chauvin, Robert H. Grubbs and Richard R. Schrock were selected
for the Noble Prize in chemistry for their work on the development of the metathesis reaction in organic
synthesis. And finally, recent Noble Prize in chemistry in 2010 was awarded to Richard F. Heck, Ei-ichi
Negishi and Akira Suzuki for palladium-catalysed cross coupling reactions in organic synthesis. Until
recently, reports featuring homogeneous transition metal catalysis were focused on using rare and expensive
metals. The application of noble metals raises major concern, as they are toxic and consequently they
produce toxic waste. And to their low availability (listed as critical raw materials for European Union),
noble metals require difficult extraction from the Earth’s crust.weiterlesen