The purpose of this project has been to expand the η8 binding mode of the permethylpentalene ligand into uranium, zirconium and hafnium chemistry. All three of these elements have shown intriguing, high-hapticity carbocyclic chemistry and, because of their relatively large size, are excellent candidates for the development of organometallic permethylpentalene chemistry. Chapter one of this thesis will review previous work on η n carbocyclic ring chemistry of these elements, where n = 6 - 8. This introduction will include the unsaturated rings systems where all the ,carbons are bonded to the metal centre, specifically η6 arene systems, η 7 cyclohept.atriene systems, and η 8 cyclooctatetraene and pentalene systems. Species of lower hapticity (e .g. the η 6 binding mode of cycloheptatriene) will not be covered but reviews, where available, will be referenced. Chapter two documents the successful synthesis and characterisation of η 8 permethylpentalene uranium (IV) species. Initially, the uranocene equivalent, UPn*2 was synthesised and characterised structurally, magnetically and electrochemically. From here, a half-sandwich synthon [U Pn*CI4][Li(TMEDA)h was synthesised which was used for further salt metathesis chemistry in order to make a number of mixed sandwich complexes. Chapter three is an account of the synthesis and characterisation of zirconium and hafnium η 8 permethylpentalene species. Initial work focused on the synthesis of a suitable synthon analogous to that used for the previously synthesised titanium species. However, this route was unsuccessful and an alternative species was formed, [MPn*(μ-Cl)3/2]2(μCl)2[Li(THF)x(Et2O)y]. This species could be made on a multi-gram scale and proved to be a sui table synthon for further synthesis. Salt metathesis reactions were undertaken and a number of new species were synthesised and characterised including mixed-sandwich, alkyl, aryl and allyl species. Chapter four reports the results of polymerisation testing that was undertaken for selected synthesised compounds. All compounds catalysed the formation of poly(ethylene), with the group 4 mixed sandwich species being particularly active catalysts. Two of the zirconium species, ZrPn*CpCI and ZrPn*Cp2 were therefore used for further optimisation experiments which were somewhat limited due to the high activity of the compounds. These were useful in gaining insight into conditions that should be investigated on a larger reaction scale. Chapter five gives the full experimental details for all the syntheses described in chapters two and three as well as details of instrumentation used for characterisation, and also gives the respective loadings of catalyst and co-catalyst employed in the polymerisation testing reported in chapter four. Chapter six presents the full characterisation data obtained for the compounds synthesised and the electronic appendix attached as a CD at the back of the thesis contains the crystal data .cif files and the DFT output files (.out). ,
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:606361 |
Date | January 2013 |
Creators | Chadwick, Frederick Mark |
Contributors | O'Hare, Dermot M. |
Publisher | University of Oxford |
Source Sets | Ethos UK |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
Source | http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:73a3cdb3-ba8b-4a67-8090-156da9b160ec |
Page generated in 0.0015 seconds