TY - JOUR
T1 - Recent advances in heterogeneous porous Metal–Organic Framework catalysis for Suzuki-Miyaura cross-couplings
AU - Rao, Ravulakollu Srinivasa
AU - Bashri, Mahira
AU - Mohideen, Mohamed Infas Haja
AU - Yildiz, Ibrahim
AU - Shetty, Dinesh
AU - Shaya, Janah
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
PY - 2024/12/15
Y1 - 2024/12/15
N2 - Suzuki-Miyaura coupling (SMC), a crucial C–C cross-coupling reaction, is still associated with challenges such as high synthetic costs, intricate work-ups, and contamination with homogeneous metal catalysts. Research intensely focuses on strategies to convert homogeneous soluble metal catalysts into insoluble powder solids, promoting heterogeneous catalysis for easy recovery and reuse as well as for exploring greener reaction protocols. Metal-Organic Frameworks (MOFs), recognized for their high surface area, porosity, and presence of transition metals, are increasingly studied for developing heterogeneous SMC. The molecular fence effect, attributed to MOF surface functionalization, helps preventing catalyst deactivation by aggregation, migration, and leaching during catalysis. Recent reports demonstrate the enhanced catalytic activity, selectivity, stability, application scopes, and potential of MOFs in developing greener heterogeneous synthetic methodologies. This review focuses on the catalytic applications of MOFs in SMC reactions, emphasizing developments after 2016. It critically examines the synthesis and incorporation of active metal species into MOFs, focusing on morphology, crystallinity, and dimensionality for catalytic activity induction. MOF catalysts are categorized based on their metal nodes in subsections, with comprehensive discussion on Pd incorporation strategies, catalyst structures, optimal SMC conditions, and application scopes, concluding with insights into challenges and future research directions in this important emerging area of MOF applications.
AB - Suzuki-Miyaura coupling (SMC), a crucial C–C cross-coupling reaction, is still associated with challenges such as high synthetic costs, intricate work-ups, and contamination with homogeneous metal catalysts. Research intensely focuses on strategies to convert homogeneous soluble metal catalysts into insoluble powder solids, promoting heterogeneous catalysis for easy recovery and reuse as well as for exploring greener reaction protocols. Metal-Organic Frameworks (MOFs), recognized for their high surface area, porosity, and presence of transition metals, are increasingly studied for developing heterogeneous SMC. The molecular fence effect, attributed to MOF surface functionalization, helps preventing catalyst deactivation by aggregation, migration, and leaching during catalysis. Recent reports demonstrate the enhanced catalytic activity, selectivity, stability, application scopes, and potential of MOFs in developing greener heterogeneous synthetic methodologies. This review focuses on the catalytic applications of MOFs in SMC reactions, emphasizing developments after 2016. It critically examines the synthesis and incorporation of active metal species into MOFs, focusing on morphology, crystallinity, and dimensionality for catalytic activity induction. MOF catalysts are categorized based on their metal nodes in subsections, with comprehensive discussion on Pd incorporation strategies, catalyst structures, optimal SMC conditions, and application scopes, concluding with insights into challenges and future research directions in this important emerging area of MOF applications.
KW - Catalysis
KW - MOF
KW - Palladium
KW - Suzuki-miyaura coupling
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85210534263
U2 - 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e40571
DO - 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e40571
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85210534263
SN - 2405-8440
VL - 10
JO - Heliyon
JF - Heliyon
IS - 23
M1 - e40571
ER -