Abstract
The process of catalyst discovery and development relying on combinatorial methods has suffered so far from the difficult access to structurally diverse and large libraries of ligands, in particular the structurally more complex class of bidentate ligands. A completely new approach to streamline the difficult ligand synthesis process is to use structurally less complex monodentate ligands that self‐assemble in the coordination sphere of a metal center through noncovalent attractive ligand–ligand interactions to generate bidentate, chelating ligands. When complementary attractive ligand–ligand interactions are employed, it is even possible to generate libraries of defined chelate–ligand catalysts by simply mixing two different monomeric ligands. This Minireview summarizes the first approaches and results in this new field of combinatorial homogeneous catalysis.