Time-resolved studies of germylene, GeH2, generated by laser flash photolysis of 3,4-dimethylgermacyclopentene-3, have been carried out to obtain rate constants for its bimolecular reaction with
monogermane, GeH4. The reaction was studied in the gas phase over the pressure range 1−100 Torr, with SF6
as bath gas, at five temperatures in the range 292−520 K. The reaction of GeH2 with GeH4 to form digermane,
Ge2H6, is pressure dependent, consistent with a third-body assisted association reaction. The high-pressure
rate constants, obtained by extrapolation, gave the following Arrhenius equation: log(k
∞
/cm3 molecule-1 s-1)
= (−11.17 ± 0.10) + (5.2 ± 0.7 kJ mol-1)/RT ln 10. These Arrhenius parameters are consistent with a
moderately fast reaction occurring at approximately one-fifth of the collision rate. RRKM modeling, based on
a variational transition state, used in combination with a weak collisional deactivation model, gave good fits
to the pressure dependent curves, for a suitable choice of the critical energy, E
o
, for reverse decomposition of
Ge2H6. The step size (energy removed in a down collision) was chosen by analogy with the corresponding
system for Si2H6 (collisional efficiency (βc) of ca. 0.7 for SF6). The value obtained for E
o
was 155 kJ mol-1.
Corrected for thermal energy and combined with the insertion activation energy this gives Δ
H° = 166 kJ
mol-1 for the decomposition of Ge2H6. There is no previous experimental determination of this quantity. From
it we derive
= 237 ± 12 kJ mol-1, in reasonable agreement with earlier estimates. From bond
dissociation energy values the Divalent State Stabilization Energy (DSSE) of germylene (119 kJ mol-1) is
larger than that of silylene (94 k J mol-1). Ab initio calculations at the correlated level reveal the presence of
two weak complexes (local energy minima) on the potential energy surface corresponding to either direct or
inverted geometry of the inserting germylene fragment. Surprisingly, the latter is the lower in energy, lying 25
kJ mol-1 below the unassociated reactants. These complexes rearrange to digermane with very low barriers.
The implications of these findings and the nature of the insertion process are discussed.
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