Homoleptic dinuclear beryllium carbonyl cation complexes have been produced and characterized in the gas phase. Infrared photodissociation spectroscopic and theoretical results confirm that Be 2 (CO) 5 + is a coordination saturated complex that can be assigned to a mixture of two almost isoenergetic structural isomers. Besides a beryllium-beryllium single-bonded (OC) 2 Be-Be(CO) 3 + isomer, another structure involving an unusual end-on and side-on bridging carbonyl ligand with very low carbonyl stretching frequency is identified.
Carbonmonoxidecanbindtomanytransition-metalcentersin forming diverse transition-metal carbonyl complexes, which are not only of close relevance to many industrial processes in synthesis [1] and catalysis, [2] but also served as prototypical models in understanding the metal-ligand and metal-metal bonding. [3] The carbon monoxide ligands engage in a range of bonding modes in the transition metal carbonyl complexes. [4] Besides the ubiquitous terminal end-on type, the symmetrical and unsymmetrical end-on bridging, [5] the sideon bridging [6,7] as well as the linear M-C-O-M bridging [8] coordination modes are also known in bi-and multinuclear transition metal carbonyl complexes.Compared to the countless transition-metal carbonyl complexes, only very few stable main-group metal carbonyl complexes have been synthesized and crystallographically characterized owing to the lack of accessible valence d orbitals for bonding with carbon monoxide. [9][10][11] Most of homoleptic carbonyl complexes of main group elements are not stable at ambient conditions, and they can usually only be observed in low-temperature matrices [12][13][14][15][16] or in the gas phase. [17][18][19] In these main-group element carbonyl complexes, the carbon monoxide ligand binds predominantly in terminal end-on mode. The other coordination modes that are quite common in transition-metal carbonyl complexes are rarely observed in the main-group element carbonyl complexes. Only very few dinuclear Group 13 metal carbonyl complexes were reported to involve the end-on bridging carbonyl ligands, [20] and a high-lying BeCOBe species has been characterized to involve a linear bridging CO unit. [21]