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Pincers, tridentate ligands that prefer a meridional geometry, are a rising class because of their distinctive combination of properties. They permit a good level of control on the nature of the coordination sphere by holding the donor groups in a predictable arrangement. Some groups, such as an aryl or a pyridine, that would normally be easily lost as monodentate ligands, become reliably coordinated, especially if they form the central donor unit of the three. Many pincer complexes show exceptional thermal stability, a property that is particularly prized in homogeneous catalysis where they can permit high temperature operation. The connectors between the three donor groups are often rigid, enforcing a strict mer geometry but flexible linkers permit fac binding and even fluxionality between the two forms. Rigid pincers can make good ligands for asymmetric catalysis-if the wingtip groups cannot easily rotate they may instead maintain a geometry in which suitable substituents project into the active site area of the catalyst where they help enantio-differentiation of the relevant transition states. Examples have been selected to illustrate these and other properties of this promising ligand class.
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Eduardo Peris
Universitat Jaume I
Robert H. Crabtree
Millersville University
Chemical Society Reviews
Yale University
Universitat Jaume I
University of New Haven
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Peris et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a01a43b6f2c4fd2e25c9b9a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/c7cs00693d
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