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Coordination and Homologation of CO at Al(I): Mechanism and Chain Growth, Branching, Isomerization, and Reduction

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Heilmann, Andreas
Roy, Matthew M. D.
Crumpton, Agamemnon E.
Griffin, Liam P.
Hicks, Jamie
Goicoechea, Jose M.
Aldridge, Simon

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Homologation of carbon monoxide is central to the heterogeneous Fischer- Tropsch process for the production of hydrocarbon fuels. C-C bond formation has been modeled by homogeneous systems, with [CnOn]2- fragments (n = 2-6) formed by two -electron reduction being commonly encountered. Here, we show that four-or six-electron reduction of CO can be accomplished by the use of anionic aluminum(I) ("aluminyl") compounds to give both topologically linear and branched C4/C6 chains. We show that the mechanism for homologation relies on the highly electron-rich nature of the aluminyl reagent and on an unusual mode of interaction of the CO molecule, which behaves primarily as a Z-type ligand in initial adduct formation. The formation of [C6O6]4- from [C4O4]4- shows for the first time a solution-phase CO homologation process that brings about chain branching via complete C-O bond cleavage, while a comparison of the linear [C4O4]4- system with the [C4O4]6- congener formed under more reducing conditions models the net conversion of C-O bonds to C-C bonds in the presence of additional reductants.

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Journal of the American Chemical Society

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