The redox capabilities of some binuclear and trinuclear ruthenium complexes with bridging o-phenylendiamido ligands, C6H4(NH)(2)-o, have been investigated. The known species [Ru-2{mu-C6H4(NH)(2)-o}(mu-dppm)(CO)(2)(PPh3)(2)] (1) and [Ru2Mo{mu-C6H4(NH)(2)-o}(2)(CO)(6)(PPh3)(2)] (5), reacted with [Fe(Cp)(2)](PF6), yield the salts [Ru-2{mu-C6H4(NH)(2)-o(mu-dppm)(CO)(2)(PPh3)(2)](PF6)(2) (2) and [Ru2Mo{mu-C6H4(NH)(2)-o}(2)(CO)(6)(PPh3)(2)](PF6)(2)(CH2Cl2)-C-. (6), respectively (dppm = Ph2PCH2PPh2). Binuclear compounds analogous to 2 were obtained with pairs of PPh3 or CO ligands in place of the diphosphine dppm. The redox properties of the compounds have been explored also with electrochemical methods. The structural determinations of 2 and 6 show, as an evident consequence of the oxidation, the bending of the originally upright C6H4(NH)(2)-o bridge toward one metal that is eventually eta(4)-coordinated by the ligand. In the trinuclear species 6, such a bending is limited to only one bridge and is directed toward the central molybdenum atom. Another structural consequence, attributable to electronic effects, is the reciprocal reorientation of two terminal L3M fragments with modes that are different in 2 and 6, respectively. These aspects have been highlighted through a theoretical analysis with DFT calculations and an extension of the perturbation theory arguments already introduced for the precursors 1 and 5. There is evidence that, in each case, the oxidation affects mainly the bridging chelate C6H4(NH)(2)-o that transforms from diamido to diimino in character. The activated back-donation from the eta(4)-coordinated metal into the diimino ligand causes also an evident weakening of the metal-metal bond. Complex 6 represents the first well-characterized case where one o-phenylenediamido and one o-diiminobenzene coexist as ligands.
Structural and Electronic Rearrangements upon the Oxidation of Binuclear (Ru2) and Trinuclear (MoRu2) Complexes with Bridging o-Phenylenediamido Ligands
Ienco Andrea;Mealli Carlo
2004
Abstract
The redox capabilities of some binuclear and trinuclear ruthenium complexes with bridging o-phenylendiamido ligands, C6H4(NH)(2)-o, have been investigated. The known species [Ru-2{mu-C6H4(NH)(2)-o}(mu-dppm)(CO)(2)(PPh3)(2)] (1) and [Ru2Mo{mu-C6H4(NH)(2)-o}(2)(CO)(6)(PPh3)(2)] (5), reacted with [Fe(Cp)(2)](PF6), yield the salts [Ru-2{mu-C6H4(NH)(2)-o(mu-dppm)(CO)(2)(PPh3)(2)](PF6)(2) (2) and [Ru2Mo{mu-C6H4(NH)(2)-o}(2)(CO)(6)(PPh3)(2)](PF6)(2)(CH2Cl2)-C-. (6), respectively (dppm = Ph2PCH2PPh2). Binuclear compounds analogous to 2 were obtained with pairs of PPh3 or CO ligands in place of the diphosphine dppm. The redox properties of the compounds have been explored also with electrochemical methods. The structural determinations of 2 and 6 show, as an evident consequence of the oxidation, the bending of the originally upright C6H4(NH)(2)-o bridge toward one metal that is eventually eta(4)-coordinated by the ligand. In the trinuclear species 6, such a bending is limited to only one bridge and is directed toward the central molybdenum atom. Another structural consequence, attributable to electronic effects, is the reciprocal reorientation of two terminal L3M fragments with modes that are different in 2 and 6, respectively. These aspects have been highlighted through a theoretical analysis with DFT calculations and an extension of the perturbation theory arguments already introduced for the precursors 1 and 5. There is evidence that, in each case, the oxidation affects mainly the bridging chelate C6H4(NH)(2)-o that transforms from diamido to diimino in character. The activated back-donation from the eta(4)-coordinated metal into the diimino ligand causes also an evident weakening of the metal-metal bond. Complex 6 represents the first well-characterized case where one o-phenylenediamido and one o-diiminobenzene coexist as ligands.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.