| Literature DB >> 30733449 |
Jan Bohnenberger1, Wolfram Feuerstein2, Daniel Himmel1, Michael Daub1, Frank Breher3, Ingo Krossing4.
Abstract
Homoleptic carbonyl radical cations are a textbook family of complexes hitherto unknown in the condensed phase, leaving their properties and applications fundamentally unexplored. Here we report on two stable 17-electron [Cr(CO)6]•+ salts that were synthesized by oxidation of Cr(CO)6 with [NO]+[Al(ORF)4]- (RF = C(CF3)3)) in CH2Cl2 and with removal of NO gas. Longer reaction times led to NO/CO ligand exchange and formation of the thermodynamically more stable 18-electron species [Cr(CO)5(NO)]+, which belongs to the family of heteroleptic chromium carbonyl/nitrosyl cations. All salts were fully characterized (IR, Raman, EPR, NMR, scXRD, pXRD, magnetics) and are stable at room temperature under inert conditions over months. The facile synthesis of these species enables the thorough investigation of their properties and applications to a broad scientific community.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30733449 PMCID: PMC6367395 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-08517-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Currently known and structurally characterized homoleptic transition metal carbonyl cations of group 7–12a
| 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3d | [Mn(CO)6]+ [ | [Fe(CO)6]2+ | [Co(CO)5]+ | – | [Cu(CO) | – |
| 4d | [Tc(CO)6]+ [ | [Ru(CO)6]2+ | [Rh(CO)4]+ b | [Pd(CO)4]2+ b | [Ag(CO) | – |
| 5d | [Re(CO)6]+ | [Os(CO)6]2+ | [Ir(CO)4]+ b | [Pt(CO)4]2+ b | [Au(CO)2]+ | [Hg(CO)2]2+ |
aFrom Group 3–6, no such cations are known. Only structurally characterized examples are shown; transition metal carbonyl cations are only referenced, if not mentioned in the reviews[19–22]
bSixteen valence electron species
cBidentate, weakly bridging fluorosulfate groups are present
Fig. 1Reaction scheme yielding complexes 1 and 2 (Eq. 1) as well as 3 and 4 (Eq. 2). The pictures show the crystalline complexes 1 (pale yellow) and 3 (orange)
Fig. 2Block figure showing essential IR, Raman, and EPR spectra of complexes 1–4. a, b Stacked IR and Raman spectra of compounds 1 (dark blue), 2 (red), 3 (blue), 4 (purple), and the respective simulated calculated spectra (black, BP86-D3BJ/def2-TZVPP) of the cations in the CO/NO stretching range between 1800 and 2300 cm−1; For the full spectra, including an assignment of all bands see Supplementary Figures 42–49 and Supplementary Tables 2, 3. c EPR spectrum of 1 at X-Band (9.4002 GHz) in a frozen solution of a 1:1 (v:v) mixture of oDFB and toluene at 100 K. d Experimental (black) and simulated (blue) EPR spectrum of 1 at X-Band (9.37821 GHz) in a frozen solution of oDFB at 4 K in agreement with the D3d ground state. e Calculated spin density of D3d-[Cr(CO)6]•+ at the SA-CASSCF/cc-pVTZ level of theory. Isovalue at 0.02 a.u. f Equilibration path that transforms the two equivalent D3d ground states (GS) at 100 K over a low-lying D2h transition state (TS), yielding a coalescent signal in the 100 K EPR spectrum
Experimental (exp.) and calculated (calcd.) vibrational spectra of [Cr(CO)6]•+, [Cr(CO)5(NO)]+, and the isoelectronic vanadium analogsa
| IR Spectra | Raman spectra | IRb | Ramanc | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calcd. ( |
|
|
|
| Calcd. ( |
| Exp. V(CO)6[ | |
| 2157 (0) | 2175 (s) | 2173 (s) | 2157 (208) |
| 2102 (12.5) | |||
| 2084 (816) | 2094 (s) | 2096 (s) | 2084 (0) |
| 1991 (54) | |||
| 2081 (999) | 2081 (0) |
| 1985 (100) | |||||
| 2074 (0) | 2128 (br, vs) | 2126 (br, vs) | 2074 (413) |
| ≈1970 (vbr, vs)c | |||
| Calcd. ( |
|
|
|
| Calcd. ( |
| Exp. V(CO)5(NO)[ | |
| 2161 (91) | 2184 (vw) | 2183 (vw) | 2185 (m) | 2184 (m) | 2161 (177) |
| 2100 (w) | Not available |
| [2175 (vw)]e | [2173 (vw)]e | |||||||
| 2123 (91) | 2164 (vvw) | 2162 (vvw) | 2164 (m) | 2163 (m) | 2123 (217) |
| 2050 (w) | |
| 2097 (0) | 2127 (vvw) | 2127 (vvs) | 2125 (vvs) | 2097 (340) |
| |||
| 2085 (1055) | 2108 (ms) | 2107 (vs) | 2112 (vw) | 2110 (vvw) | 2085 (5) |
| 1990 (s) | |
| 2099 (m)f |
| |||||||
| 2074 (vvw)g | 2072 (vvw)g | 2076 (vvw)g | 2074 (vvw)g | 13COg | ||||
| 1899 (1052) | 1841 (mw) | 1839 (ms) | 1843 (vvw) | 1842 (vvw) | 1899 (39) | 1695 (m) |
aIR and Raman bands and relative intensities of the CO and NO vibrations are given for complexes 1–4 and the DFT calculated (BP86-D3BJ/def2-TZVPP) values for the [Cr(CO)6]•+ and [Cr(CO)5(NO)]+ cations; (br: broad, v: very, s: strong, m: medium, w: weak); Raman and IR intensities were calculated with the Gaussian software. Note that here we gave preference to the BP86 functional, which gave better unscaled absolute band positions than the TPSSh functional chosen for bond lengths and EPR calculations (vide infra and Supplementary Table 4)
bAt 5 K in Neon matrix[51].
cAt room temperature in benzene solution. The signal is very broad and covers a wide range from 2050 to 1850 cm–1
dIR-intensities in km mol−1 and Raman scattering activities in Å4 amu−1
eSmall contamination with A1g-stretch of [Cr(CO)6]•+ in 1 (2175 cm−1) and 2 (2173 cm−1)
fProbably removal of the degeneracy of the E-mode in 4 (2107 cm−1). In 3 the signal is broader and covers this detail
gProbably the isotope shifted 13CO band of the intense E-mode at 2108/2107 (IR) and 2112/2110 (Raman) cm−1. Exp. Δ(ν(12CO) – v(13CO)) = 34 (3), 33 (4) cm−1 for IR; 36 (3), 36 (4) for Raman. Calcd.: 36 cm−1 for an explicit 13CO ligand placed in equatorial position (Cs-symmetry; absolute calculated position: 2048 cm−1 (I: 735))
Comparison of experimental (exp.) and theoretical (calcd.) bond lengths of 1–4 and selected literature complexes
| Exp. bond | Lengths (pm)a | Exp. bond | Lengths (pm)b | Calcd. bond | Lengths (pm)c | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [Al(ORF)4]− | [F-{Al(ORF)3}2]− | [Cr(CO)6]+ | [Cr(CO)5(NO)]+ | Cr(CO)6 | |||||
| [Cr(CO)6]+ | [Cr(CO)5(NO)]+ | [Cr(CO)6]+ | [Cr(CO)5(NO)]+ | Cr(CO)6[ | V(CO)6[ |
|
|
| |
| Cr–C1 | 196.2(3) | 195.8(3) | 198.2(2) | 194.9(4) | 191.4(1) | 199.3(5) | 197.5 | 202.0 | 190.9 |
| Cr–C2d | 199.1(1) | 196.2(1) | 191.1(1)e | 199.4(5)e | 195.8 | ||||
| Cr–C3 | 196.9(3) | 192.4(3) | 190.9(1) | 200.3(4) | 172.9 (Cr–N) | ||||
| 191.7(1)e | 200.6(4)e | ||||||||
| C1–O1 | 112.4(3) | 112.4(3) | 112.2(2) | 112.5(5) | 114.2(1) | 113.3(4) | 113.0 | 112.6 | 114.4 |
| C2–O2d | 112.0(1) | 112.5(2) | 114.2 (1)e | 113.9(4)e | 113.1 | ||||
| C3–O3 | 112.4(3) | 113.0(3) | 114.4(1) | 113.3(3) | 113.6 (N–O) | ||||
| 113.9(1)e | 112.4(3)e | ||||||||
| Avg.f Cr–C | 198.6(4) | 195.6(4) | 198.2(2) | 194.9(4) | 191.3(2) | 199.9(9) | 197.5 | 193.0 | 190.9 |
| Avg.f C–O | 112.1(4) | 112.6(5) | 112.2(2) | 112.5(5) | 114.1(2) | 113.2(7) | 113.0 | 113.1 | 114.4 |
aThis work
bFrom literature
cTPSSh-D3BJ/def2-TZVPP
dLigand on the C4-symmetry axis
eC2-symmetry axis
fMean error of bond lengths were calculated according to Gaussian error propagation
Fig. 3Molecular structures of complexes 1–4. Pale yellow colored (orange colored) crystals suitable for scXRD and with spectroscopic data in agreement with an assignment as 1 and 2 (3 and 4) were isolated from batches of reactions according to Eq. 1 (Eq. 2). However, the respective nitrogen position was never crystallographically distinguishable from the carbon positions. Therefore, only one set of molecular structures is shown: 1 and 3 (left) and 2 and 4 (right). Inclusion of a disordered nitrogen atom into the refinement did only slightly change the agreement factors (Supplementary Figures 70 and 72). Nevertheless, the average bond lengths are about 3 pm shorter for 3 and 4, which agrees with the (calculated) shorter Cr–N bond length and the observed smaller unit cell volumes. Only crystallographically independent atoms were labeled; ellipsoids are shown at 50% probability level. See Table 3 for information on metric data
Calculated relative electronic energies E and g-values with different point groups for the [Cr(CO)6]•+ cationa
| Exp. |
|
|
|
|
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Δ | 0 (0.00) | 26 (0.31) | 136 (1.63) | 71 (0.85) | 410 (4.92) | |
|
| 2.185 | 2.173 | 2.177 | 2.434 | ||
|
| 1.947 | 1.971 | 1.969 | 1.761 | ||
|
| 2.106 | 2.106 | 2.108 | 2.210 |
aElectronic energies were calculated with DLPNO-CCSD(T)/def2-TZVPP (E in cm−1; kJ mol−1 in parentheses), structures were optimized with TPSSh-D3BJ/def2-TZVPP; the calculated (NEVPT2-SA-CAS-SCF/cc-pVTZ) anisotropic g-tensor components perpendicular () and parallel () to the principal molecular axis as well as isotropic g-values for the minimum structures D3d, C2h and D4h are compared to the experimental values (exp.)
bTransition state structure connecting two equivalent D3d symmetric structures
cNot a stationary point
dgiso = (2*g⊥ + g∥)/3