Decamethyltitanocene hydride intermediates in the hydrogenation of the corresponding titanocene-(η2-ethene) or (η2-alkyne) complexes and the effects of bulkier auxiliary ligands?
Dalton Transactions Pub Date: 2017-05-30 DOI: 10.1039/C7DT01545C
Abstract
1H NMR studies of reactions of titanocene [Cp*2Ti] (Cp* = η5-C5Me5) and its derivatives [Cp*(η5:η1-C5Me4CH2)TiMe] and [Cp*2Ti(η2-CH2
CH2)] with excess dihydrogen at room temperature and pressures lower than 1 bar revealed the formation of dihydride [Cp*2TiH2] (1) and the concurrent liberation of either methane or ethane, depending on the organometallic reactant. The subsequent slow decay of 1 yielding [Cp*2TiH] (2) was mediated by titanocene formed in situ and controlled by hydrogen pressure. The crystalline products obtained by evaporating a hexane solution of fresh [Cp*2Ti] in the presence of hydrogen contained crystals having either two independent molecules of 1 in the asymmetric part of the unit cell or cocrystals consisting of 1 and [Cp*2Ti] in a 2?:?1 ratio. Hydrogenation of alkyne complexes [Cp*2Ti(η2-R1C
CR2)] (R1 = R2 = Me or Et) performed at room temperature afforded alkanes R1CH2CH2R2, and after removing hydrogen, 2 was formed in quantitative yields. For alkyne complexes containing bulkier substituent(s) R1 = Me or Ph, R2 = SiMe3, and R1 = R2 = Ph or SiMe3, successful hydrogenation required the application of increased temperatures (70–80 °C) and prolonged reaction times, in particular for bis(trimethylsilyl)acetylene. Under these conditions, no transient 1 was detected during the formation of 2. The bulkier auxiliary ligands η5-C5Me4tBu and η5-C5Me4SiMe3 did not hinder the addition of dihydrogen to the corresponding titanocenes [(η5-C5Me4tBu)2Ti] and [(η5-C5Me4SiMe3)2Ti] yielding [(η5-C5Me4tBu)2TiH2] (3) and [(η5-C5Me4SiMe3)2TiH2] (4), respectively. In contrast to 1, the dihydride 4 did not decay with the formation of titanocene monohydride, but dissociated to titanocene upon dihydrogen removal. The monohydrides [(η5-C5Me4tBu)2TiH] (5) and [(η5-C5Me4SiMe3)2TiH] (6) were obtained by insertion of dihydrogen into the intramolecular titanium-methylene σ-bond in compounds [(η5-C5Me4tBu)(η5:η1-C5Me4CMe2CH2)Ti] and [(η5-C5Me4SiMe3)(η5:η1-C5Me4SiMe2CH2)Ti], respectively. The steric influence of the auxiliary ligands became clear from the nature of the products obtained by reacting 5 and 6 with butadiene. They appeared to be the exclusively σ-bonded η1-but-2-enyl titanocenes (7) and (8), instead of the common π-bonded derivatives formed for the sterically less congested titanocenes, including [Cp*2Ti(η3-(1-methylallyl))] (9). The molecular structure optimized by DFT for compound 1 acquired a distinctly lower total energy than the analogously optimized complex with a coordinated dihydrogen [Cp*2Ti(η2-H2)]. The stabilization energies of binding the hydride ligands to the bent titanocenes were estimated from counterpoise computations; they showed a decrease in the order 1 (?132.70 kJ mol?1), 3 (?121.11 kJ mol?1), and 4 (?112.35 kJ mol?1), in accordance with the more facile dihydrogen dissociation.
Recommended Literature
- [1] Excellent mechanical performance and enhanced dielectric properties of OBC/SiO2 elastomeric nanocomposites: effect of dispersion of the SiO2 nanoparticles? Xing Zhao,Lu Bai,Rui-Ying Bao,Zheng-Ying Liu,Ming-Bo Yang,Wei YangRSC Adv., 2017,7, 46297-46305 10.1039/C7RA08074C
- [2] Evidence of CO2 molecule acting as an electron acceptor on a nanoporous metal–organic-framework MIL-53 or Cr3+(OH)(O2C–C6H4–CO2)? Alexandre Vimont,Arnaud Travert,Philippe Bazin,Jean-Claude Lavalley,Marco Daturi,Christian Serre,Gérard Férey,Sandrine Bourrelly,Philip L. LlewellynChem. Commun., 2007, 3291-3293 10.1039/B703468G
- [3] Dissociative electron attachment to HGaF4 Lewis–Br?nsted superacid Marcin Czapla,Jack SimonsPhys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2018,20, 21739-21745 10.1039/C8CP04007A
- [4] Emerging investigator series: bacteriophages as nano engineering tools for quality monitoring and pathogen detection in water and wastewater Fereshteh BayatEnviron. Sci.: Nano, 2021,8, 367-389 10.1039/D0EN00962H
- [5] Estimates of hydride ion stability in condensed systems: energy of formation and solvation in aqueous and polar-organic solvents Craig A. Kelly,David R. RosseinskyPhys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2001,3, 2086-2090 10.1039/B010092G
- [6] Embedding cyclic nitrone in mesoporous silica particles for EPR spin trapping of superoxide and other radicals? Eric Besson,Stéphane Gastaldi,Emily Bloch,Selma Aslan,Hakim Karoui,Olivier Ouari,Micael HardyAnalyst, 2019,144, 4194-4203 10.1039/C9AN00468H
- [7] Emerging 2D hybrid nanomaterials: towards enhanced sensitive and selective conductometric gas sensors at room temperature Hanie Hashtroudi,Ian D. R. MackinnonJ. Mater. Chem. C, 2020,8, 13108-13126 10.1039/D0TC01968B
- [8] Exceptionally high temperature spin crossover in amide-functionalised 2,6-bis(pyrazol-1-yl)pyridine iron(ii) complex revealed by variable temperature Raman spectroscopy and single crystal X-ray diffraction? Max Attwood,Hiroki Akutsu,Lee Martin,Toby J. Blundell,Pierre Le Maguere,Scott S. TurnerDalton Trans., 2021,50, 11843-11851 10.1039/D1DT01743H
- [9] Excellent energy storage performance in NaNbO3-based relaxor antiferroeic ceramics under a low electric field XuxinCheng,XiaomingChen,PengyuanFan 10.1007/s10832-022-00283-w
- [10] Empowering microfluidics by micro-3D printing and solution-based mineral coating? Hongxia Li,Aikifa Raza,Qiaoyu Ge,Jin-You Lu,TieJun ZhangSoft Matter, 2020,16, 6841-6849 10.1039/D0SM00958J
Journal Name:Dalton Transactions
research_products
-
CAS no.: 89640-58-4