TY - JOUR
T1 - Counterion Engineering of Cationic Molecular Cage Host Modulates the Microenvironment of Palladium Clusters for Selective Hydrogenation
AU - Zhou, Jun Hao
AU - Zhang, Suyun
AU - Cui, Jing Wang
AU - Liu, Si Hua
AU - Yang, Xinchun
AU - Sun, Jian Ke
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Developing highly efficient catalysts for the selective hydrogenation of nitroarenes─an environmentally benign approach for producing industrially relevant aniline intermediates─remains a significant challenge. While Pd catalysts are known for their high activity, they often suffer from poor selectivity in this reaction. Here, we introduce a strategy to enhance the selectivity of Pd clusters encapsulated within quaternary ammonium cages (QA-Cage) by engineering the surrounding counterions (F-, I-, and BF4-) to modify the Pd microenvironment. Notably, Pd⊂QA-Cage-F achieves complete conversion and exceptional selectivity (≥99%) toward nitro group reduction across various nitroarenes while preserving other reducible functional groups (e.g., halides) under mild conditions. Experimental results and Density functional theory calculations reveal that electrostatic interactions between counterions and the cationic cage, which vary in electronegativity ability, modulate the electronic structure of the cage and, in turn, regulate the electronic state of the encapsulated Pd surface. The tailored Pd surface, combined with C-H (from cage skeleton)···anion interactions, enhances substrate adsorption and configuration stabilization, and promotes the preferential adsorption of nitro groups on the electron-deficient Pd, enabling selective hydrogenation of substituted nitroarenes to the desired anilines.
AB - Developing highly efficient catalysts for the selective hydrogenation of nitroarenes─an environmentally benign approach for producing industrially relevant aniline intermediates─remains a significant challenge. While Pd catalysts are known for their high activity, they often suffer from poor selectivity in this reaction. Here, we introduce a strategy to enhance the selectivity of Pd clusters encapsulated within quaternary ammonium cages (QA-Cage) by engineering the surrounding counterions (F-, I-, and BF4-) to modify the Pd microenvironment. Notably, Pd⊂QA-Cage-F achieves complete conversion and exceptional selectivity (≥99%) toward nitro group reduction across various nitroarenes while preserving other reducible functional groups (e.g., halides) under mild conditions. Experimental results and Density functional theory calculations reveal that electrostatic interactions between counterions and the cationic cage, which vary in electronegativity ability, modulate the electronic structure of the cage and, in turn, regulate the electronic state of the encapsulated Pd surface. The tailored Pd surface, combined with C-H (from cage skeleton)···anion interactions, enhances substrate adsorption and configuration stabilization, and promotes the preferential adsorption of nitro groups on the electron-deficient Pd, enabling selective hydrogenation of substituted nitroarenes to the desired anilines.
KW - catalysis
KW - metal cluster
KW - microenvironment modulation
KW - porous organic cage
UR - http://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105010196594
U2 - 10.1021/acssuschemeng.5c04313
DO - 10.1021/acssuschemeng.5c04313
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105010196594
SN - 2168-0485
JO - ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering
JF - ACS Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering
ER -