We recently reported the bisdecarbonylation of o-carbomethoxybenzoylpentacarbonylmanganese(I), 1, to give 2 in which the carbomethoxy group acts as a chelating ligand.' A monodecarbonylated compound could be trapped with external phosphite but could not be directly observed by spectral means. The more rapid loss of the second CO from 1 might be related to the formation of a particularly stable chelated product (Scheme I).p-Metallo-a,@-unsaturated carbonyl compounds with a chelating carbonyl group, 3, are readily formed in many diverse
A series of spirocyclic monoorganosilicon compounds of the form RSi(OPO) 2 Cl [R = phenyl (1 1); p-tolyl (2 2); benzyl (3 3); Me (4 4); t Bu (5 5); thexyl (6 6)] (OPO = 1-oxo-2-pyridinone) was synthesized and characterized by 1 H , 13 C, and 29 Si NMR spectroscopy, X-ray crystallography, and elemental analysis. In the solid state, complexes 1 1, 2 2, and 3 3 are neutral and possess cis-OPO ligands in an octahedral arrangement, and complexes 4 4, 5 5, and 6 6 are cationic and possess effectively trans-OPO ligands in nearly ideal square pyramidal geometries along the Berry-pseudorotation coordinate. In 4-6 4-6, chloride dissociation is attributed to the additive effect of multiple intermolecular C-H•••Cl interactions in their crystals. In DMSO-d 6 solution, compounds 1 1-6 6 form cationic hexacoordinate DMSO adducts with trans-OPO ligands, all of which undergo dynamic isomerization with energy barriers of ~18-19 kcal/mol. Compounds with better leaving groups, (p-tolyl)Si(OPO) 2 X [X = I (7 7); X = triflate (8 8)], exhibit identical solution NMR spectra as 2 2, supporting anion dissociation in each. The fluoride derivatives RSi(OPO) 2 F [R = benzyl (9 9); Me (10 10)] exhibit hexacoordinate geometries with cis-OPO ligands in the solid state and exhibit dynamic isomerization in solution. Overall, these studies indicate, in both the solid and solution states, that the trans-OPO ligand arrangement is favored when anions are dissociated and a cis-OPO ligand arrangement when anions are coordinated.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.