ABSTRACT
Chromium(III) mesityl complexes were synthesized by protonolysis of chromocene with 1,3-diisopropylimidazolium chloride or DBU hydrochloride, salt metathesis with MesMgBr, and single electron oxidation with iodine.
ABSTRACT
A range of paramagnetic Cr(III) monohydrocarbyl complexes CpCr[(ArNCMe)2CH](R) (Ar = ortho-disubstituted aryl; R = primary alkyl, trimethylsilylmethyl, benzyl, phenyl, alkenyl, or alkynyl) were synthesized to investigate how varying the steric and electronic properties of the R group affected their propensity for Cr-R bond homolysis. Most complexes were prepared by salt metathesis of known CpCr[(ArNCMe)2CH](Cl) compounds in Et2O with commercial RMgCl solutions, although more sterically demanding combinations of Ar and R groups necessitated the use of halide-free MgR2 reagents and the Cr(III) tosylate or triflate derivatives. Alternative synthetic routes to Cr(III)-R species using the previously reported Cr(II) compounds CpCr[(ArNCMe)2CH] and sources of R· radicals (e.g., BEt3 and air) were also explored. The UV-vis spectra of the CpCr[(ArNCMe)2CH](R) complexes possessed two strong bands with maximum absorbances in the ranges 395-436 nm and 535-582 nm, with the band in the latter range being particularly characteristic of the Cr(III)-R compounds. The Cr-CH2R bond lengths as determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction were longer than those in the corresponding Cr-CH3 complexes, typically falling in the range 2.10 to 2.13 Å. The Cr(III) benzyl compounds displayed longer Cr-CH2Ph distances, while the bond lengths for the alkenyl and alkynyl species were substantially shorter. The rate of Cr-R bond homolysis at room temperature was determined by monitoring the reaction of Cr(III) neopentyl, benzyl, and isobutyl complexes with excess PhSSPh using UV-vis spectroscopy. Although the other primary alkyl, phenyl, and alkenyl compounds did not undergo appreciable homolysis under these conditions, they were cleanly converted to CpCr[(ArNCMe)2CH](SPh) by photolysis.