Literature DB >> 16547532

Aqueous rhodium(III) hydrides and mononuclear rhodium(II) complexes.

Andreja Bakac1.   

Abstract

In aqueous solutions, as in organic solvents, rhodium hydrides display the chemistry of one of the three limiting forms, i.e. {Rh(I)+ H+}, {Rh(II)+ H.}, and {Rh(III)+ H-}. A number of intermediates and oxidation states have been generated and explored in kinetic and mechanistic studies. Monomeric macrocyclic rhodium(II) complexes, such as L(H2O)Rh2+ (L = L1 = [14]aneN4, or L2 = meso-Me6[14]aneN4) can be generated from the hydride precursors by photochemical means or in reactions with hydrogen atom abstracting agents. These rhodium(II) complexes are oxidized rapidly with alkyl hydroperoxides to give alkylrhodium(III) complexes. Reactions of Rh(II) with organic and inorganic radicals and with molecular oxygen are fast and produce long-lived intermediates, such as alkyl, superoxo and hydroperoxo complexes, all of which display rich and complex chemistry of their own. In alkaline solutions of rhodium hydrides, the existence of Rh(I) complexes is implied by rapid hydrogen exchange between the hydride and solvent water. The acidity of the hydrides is too low, however, to allow the build-up of observable quantities of Rh(I). Deuterium kinetic isotope effects for hydride transfer to a macrocyclic Cr(v) complex are comparable to those for hydrogen atom transfer to various substrates.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16547532     DOI: 10.1039/b518230a

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dalton Trans        ISSN: 1477-9226            Impact factor:   4.390


  1 in total

1.  Electrochemical Properties of a Rhodium(III) Mono-Terpyridyl Complex and Use as a Catalyst for Light-Driven Hydrogen Evolution in Water.

Authors:  Fakourou Camara; Thomas Gavaggio; Baptiste Dautreppe; Jérôme Chauvin; Jacques Pécaut; Dmitry Aldakov; Marie-Noëlle Collomb; Jérôme Fortage
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2022-10-05       Impact factor: 4.927

  1 in total

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