| Literature DB >> 35697930 |
André K Eckhardt1, Martin-Louis Y Riu1, Mengshan Ye1, Peter Müller1, Giovanni Bistoni2,3, Christopher C Cummins4.
Abstract
Phosphorus mononitride (PN) only has a fleeting existence on Earth, and molecular precursors for the release of this molecule under mild conditions in solution have remained elusive. Here we report the synthesis of an anthracene-based precursor-an anthracene moiety featuring an azidophosphine bridge across its central ring-that dissociates into dinitrogen, anthracene and P≡N in solution with a first-order half-life of roughly 30 min at room temperature. Heated under reduced pressure, this azidophosphine-anthracene precursor decomposes in an explosive fashion at around 42 °C, as demonstrated in a molecular-beam mass spectrometry study. The precursor is also shown to serve as a PN transfer reagent in the synthesis of an Fe-NP coordination complex, through ligand exchange with its Fe-N2 counterpart. The terminal N-bonded complex was found to be energetically preferred, compared to its P-bonded linkage isomer, owing to a significant covalent Fe-pnictogen bond character and an associated less unfavourable Pauli repulsion in the metal-ligand interaction.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35697930 DOI: 10.1038/s41557-022-00958-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.274