The novel 17-electron compound Ta(CO)4dppe (dppe
=
Ph2PCH2CH2PPh2)
is formed via
hydride hydrogen atom abstraction from TaH(CO)4dppe by
the
tris(p-tert-butylphenyl)methyl
radical. The compound exists in solution as an equilibrium mixture
of monomer (the
dominant species) and carbonyl-bridged dimer
[Ta(CO)4dppe]2 but solely as the latter
in
the solid state. It is very labile but was characterized
electrochemically, IR, Raman, and
1H and 31P{1H} NMR
spectroscopically, and chemically. Typical of metal-centered
radicals,
Ta(CO)4dppe abstracts halogen atoms from organic
halides RX to give the halotantalum
compounds TaX(CO)4dppe and, in some cases,
TaR(CO)4dppe. Cyclic voltammetry experiments show that the oxidation of
[Ta(CO)4(dppe)]- in
CH2Cl2/0.1 M
[Bu4N][PF6] is a one-electron process, irreversible at scan rates below 50 V/s. The
formal potential of
[Ta(CO)4(dppe)]0/-
is estimated as −1.2 V vs ferrocene. The reduced
lifetime of the radical
is ascribed to reactions with the ionic medium, the main
electrochemical oxidation products
being TaH(CO)4(dppe) and
TaCl(CO)2(dppe)2.
Reductive carbonylation of TaCl(5) in the presence of 1,2-bis(diphenylphosphino)ethane (dppe) under the appropriate conditions results in the formation of TaCl(CO)(2)(dppe)(2) (1), as the major product, and the possibly cyclic oligomer [TaCl(CO)(2)(dppe)(2)](2)(x)() (2, 2x >/= 4) as a minor product. Carbonylation of 1 (1 atm) results in the rapid but reversible formation of TaCl(CO)(4)(dppe) (3). Solutions of all three compounds exhibit low levels of paramagnetism, possibly attributable to thermal population of low-lying triplet excited states. Crystal data for the toluene solvate of 1, C(68)H(64)ClO(2)P(4)Ta: triclinic, P&onemacr; (No. 2), a = 13.937(12) Å, b = 14.811(7) Å, c = 14.929(9) Å, alpha = 102.30(5) degrees, beta = 95.60(7) degrees, gamma = 98.41(5) degrees, Z = 2.
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