Abstract

Activation of CO2 and conversion into value-added products is an effective option to mitigate CO2 emission. The nickel(II) complexes [Ni(L1)](ClO4)2 1, [Ni(L2)](ClO4)2 2, and [Ni(L3)(CH3CN)2](Ph4B)2 3 of diazepane-based ligands [1,4-bis[(pyridin-2-yl-methyl)]-1,4-diazepane (L1), 1,4-bis[2-(pyridin-2-yl)ethyl]-1,4-diazepane (L2), and 4-bis[2-(quinoline-2-yl)-methyl]-1,4-diazepane (L3)] have been synthesized and structurally characterized. The complexes were employed as the catalysts for the conversion of atmospheric CO2 into organic carbonates in the absence of cocatalyst at 1 atm pressure. The single-crystal X-ray structures of 1 and 2 exhibit distorted square-planar geometry with almost identical Ni-N bond distances (1.891-1.946 Å). The geometry of the complexes rearranged into octahedral in acetonitrile, which was studied by paramagnetic 1H NMR and electronic spectra. The complexes selectively captured CO2 from the atmospheric air and readily converted epoxides into cyclic carbonates without any cocatalyst. They showed a maximum yield of 25% (TON, 500) using 1 atm air, which is drastically enhanced up to 89% (TON, 1780) using 1 atm pure CO2 gas. This is the highest catalytic efficiency reported for CO2 fixation using nickel-based catalysts to date. The CO2 fixation reaction without organic substrate showed the formation of carbonate-bridged dinuclear nickel(II) complexes. They showed characteristic absorption bands around 571-612 nm and were further confirmed by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, IR, and single-crystal X-ray structures. The molecular structure of carbonate-bridged intermediates exhibited two Ni2+-centers with distorted square pyramidal geometries for 2a and 3a but distorted octahedral and square pyramidal geometries for 1a. The CO2 fixation reactions possibly proceeded via the formation of CO2-bound nickel species.

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