Converting Nitrogen to a More Useful Form
Nitrogen fixation: Hafnium complex couples atmospheric nitrogen with carbon dioxide
Direct formation of a bond between carbon and nitrogen, a requirement for the formation of organonitrogen compounds without resorting to ammonia, is a serious challenge for scientists. While it does not easily enter into chemical bonds with organic substances, molecular nitrogen does have a tendency to form coordination complexes by binding to a metal. When the nitrogen acts as ligand in these complexes, it receives electrons from the metal atom disrupting the strong nitrogen-to-nitrogen triple bond. Chemists often refer to this process as "activating" the nitrogen ligand, as new chemistry is now possible.
Chirik and his co-workers found out that the nitrogen gets activated just right in a hafnocene complex (whose hafnium atoms each have two aromatic five-membered carbon rings as additional ligands), in which the nitrogen molecule is grabbed side-on by two hafnium atoms. Carbon dioxide can then react with the activated nitrogen molecule. Two carbon dioxide molecules push their way in between the nitrogen and the hafnium. One of the two nitrogen atoms thus forms two strong new bonds to two carbon atoms from the carbon dioxide. One of the nitrogen-nitrogen bonds remains intact. By using an organosilicon compound, the cores of the hafnocene complexes can be released - in the form of a silicon-containing organic hydrazine derivative.
Original publication: Paul J. Chirik et al.; "Nitrogen-Carbon Bond Formation from N2 and CO2 Promoted by a Hafnocene Dinitrogen Complex Gives Access to a Substituted Hydrazine"; Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2006.
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