ic400886b_si_002.cif (21.67 kB)
Donor-Free Phosphenium–Metal(0)–Halides with Unsymmetrically Bridging Phosphenium Ligands
dataset
posted on 2013-07-01, 00:00 authored by Daniela Förster, Jan Nickolaus, Martin Nieger, Zoltán Benkő, Andreas W. Ehlers, Dietrich GudatReactions of (cod)MCl2 (cod = 1,5 cyclooctadiene, M = Pd, Pt) with N-heterocyclic
secondary phosphines or diphosphines produced complexes [(NHP)MCl]2 (NHP = N-heterocyclic phosphenium). The
Pd complex was also accessible from a chlorophosphine precursor and
Pd2(dba)3. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction
studies established the presence of dinuclear complexes that contain
μ-bridging NHP ligands in an unsymmetrical binding mode and
display a surprising change in metal coordination geometry from distorted
trigonal (M = Pd) to T-shaped (M = Pt). DFT calculations on model
compounds reproduced these structural features for the Pt complex
but predicted an unusual C2v-symmetric molecular structure with two different metal coordination
environments for the Pd species. The deviation between this structure
and the actual centrosymmetric geometry is accounted for by the prediction
of a flat energy hypersurface, which permits large distortions in
the orientation of the NHP ligands at very low energetic cost. The
DFT results and spectroscopic studies suggest that the title compounds
should be described as phosphenium–metal(0)–halides
rather than conventional phosphido complexes of divalent metal cations
and indicate that the NHP ligands receive net charge donation from
the metals but retain a distinct cationic character. The unsymmetric
NHP binding mode is associated with an unequal distribution of σ-donor/π-acceptor
contributions in the two M–P bonds. Preliminary studies indicate
that reactions of the Pd complex with phosphine donors provide a viable
source of ligand-stabilized, zerovalent metal atoms and metal(0)–halide
fragments.