Supramolecular ligand-ligand and ligand-substrate interactions for highly selective transition metal catalysis

Dalton Trans. 2011 May 7;40(17):4355-73. doi: 10.1039/c0dt01517b. Epub 2011 Feb 17.

Abstract

The use of non covalent supramolecular ligand-ligand and ligand-substrate interactions in transition metal-catalysed transformations is a new, rapidly emerging area of research. Non-covalent interactions between monodentate ligands such as hydrogen bonding, coordinative bonding, ion pairing, π-π interactions and the formation of inclusion compounds, have been shown to impart higher activity and chemo-, regio-, and stereoselectivity to the corresponding transition metal complexes in a number of catalytic applications. Analogously, supramolecular ligand-substrate interactions, and particularly hydrogen bonding, have been used to direct the regio- and stereochemistry of several metal-catalysed reactions. The catalytic systems relying on supramolecular interactions are generally capable of self-assembling from simpler components in the environment where catalysis is to take place, and are therefore very well-suited for combinatorial catalyst discovery strategies and high-throughput screening.