ABSTRACT
Cobaltocenium carbaldehyde (formylcobaltocenium) hexafluoridophosphate, a long sought-after functionalized cobaltocenium salt, is accessible from cobaltocenium carboxylic acid by a three-step synthetic sequence involving (i) chlorination to the acid chloride, (ii) copper-borohydride reduction to the hydroxymethyl derivative, and (iii) Dess-Martin oxidation to the title compound. Due to the strongly electron-withdrawing cationic cobaltocenium moiety, no standard aldehyde reactivity is observed. Instead, nucleophilic addition followed by haloform-type cleavage prevails, thereby ruling out common useful aldehyde derivatization. One-electron reduction of cobaltocenium carbaldehyde hexafluoridophosphate affords the deep-blue, isolable cobaltocene carbaldehyde 19-valence-electron radical whose spin density is located fully at cobalt and not at the formyl carbon atom. 1H/13C NMR, IR, EPR spectroscopy, high-resolution mass spectrometry, cyclic voltammetry, single crystal structure analysis (XRD), and density functional theory are applied to characterize these unusual formyl-cobaltocenium/cobaltocene compounds.
ABSTRACT
Oxidative addition of cobaltoceniumdiazonium bis(hexafluoridophosphate) with (pseudo)halide aurates gave gold(III) complexes containing zwitterionic cobaltoceniumide as a ligand. Its selenium derivative, cobaltoceniumselenolate, was obtained by an electrophilic aromatic substitution reaction of iodocobaltocenium iodide with Na2 Se. Spectroscopic and structural data in combination with DFT calculations showed that this cobaltocenylidene species is a mesoionic carbene quite different from common N-heterocyclic carbenes. Its ligand properties (TEP, singlet-triplet gap, nucleophilicity, π-acidity, Brønsted basicity) are in part comparable to those of cyclic (amino)(alkyl/aryl)carbenes. Electrochemistry data showed that the mesoionic cobaltoceniumides are more electron-rich than their parent ferrocenes. The reversible reduction of the tricyanido gold complex appears 50â mV negative of the cobaltocenium/cobaltocene couple, whereas that of the selenide derivative is shifted cathodically by 550â mV.