A highly active copper catalyst for the hydrogenation of carbon dioxide to formate under ambient conditions

Dalton Trans. 2020 Mar 3;49(9):2994-3000. doi: 10.1039/c9dt04662c.

Abstract

Carbon dioxide (CO2) is an important reactant and can be used for the syntheses of various types of industrially important chemicals. Hence, investigation concerning the conversion of CO2 into valuable energy-rich chemicals is an important and current topic in molecular catalysis. Recent research on molecular catalysts has led to improved rates for conversion of CO2 to energy-rich products such as formate, but the catalysts based on first-row transition metals are underdeveloped. Copper(i) complexes containing the 1,1'-bis(di-tert-butylphosphino) ferrocene ligand were found to promote the catalytic hydrogenation of CO2 to formate in the presence of DBU as the base, where the catalytic conversion of CO2via hydrogenation is achieved using in situ gaseous H2 (granulated tin metal and concentrated HCl) to produce valuable energy-rich chemicals, and therefore it is a promising, safe and simple strategy to conduct reactions under ambient pressure at room temperature. Towards this goal, we report an efficient copper(i) complex based catalyst [CuI(dtbpf)] to achieve ambient-pressure CO2 hydrogenation catalysis for generating the formate salt (HCO2-) with turnover number (TON) values of 326 to 1.065 × 105 in 12 to 48 h of reaction at 25 °C to 80 °C. The outstanding catalytic performance of [CuI(dtbpf)] makes it a potential candidate for realizing the large-scale production of formate by CO2 hydrogenation.