Ruthenium–pincer
complexes bearing CNN- and PNN-pincer ligands
with diethyl- or diisopropylamino side groups, which have previously
been reported to be active precatalysts for ester hydrogenation, undergo
dehydroalkylation on heating in the presence of tricyclohexylphosphine
to release ethane or propane, giving five-coordinate ruthenium(0)
complexes containing a nascent imine functional group. Ethane or propane
is also released under the conditions of catalytic ester hydrogenation,
and time-course studies show that this release is concomitant with
the onset of catalysis. A new PNN-pincer ruthenium(0)–imine
complex is a highly active catalyst for ester hydrogenation at room
temperature, giving up to 15 500 turnovers with no added base.
This complex was shown to react reversibly at room temperature with
two equivalents of hydrogen to give a ruthenium(II)–dihydride
complex, where the imine functionality has been hydrogenated to give
a protic amine side group. These observations have potentially broad
implications for the identities of catalytic intermediates in ester
hydrogenation and related transformations