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Phosphine complexes of zirconium, hafnium and the lanthanoid metals

The synthesis of a variety of new lanthanoid phosphine complexes has been
achieved by complexing either one or two amido-diphosphine ligands to yttrium,
lutetium or lanthanum. At room temperature, the seven-coordinate bis(amido-
diphosphine) complexes, MCl[N(SiMe₂CH₂PR₂)₂]₂- are fluxional and display NMR
spectra indicative of complexes where the phosphorus donors are rapidly exchanging, probably via a dissociation-reassociation pathway. It is possible to generate thermally unstable hydrocarbyl complexes of the type, M(R)[N(SiMe₂CH₂PMe₂)₂]₂, which undergo a clean first order elimination of R-H to generate cyclometallated complexes of the type, M[N(SiMe₂CHPMe₂)(SiMe₂CH₂PMe₂)][N(SiMe₂CH₂PMe₂)₂]; the yttrium derivative was crystallographically characterized. These thermally robust compounds will undergo a-bond metathesis with H₂ and D₂ at high temperature, but appear to be too sterically congested to react with larger molecules.
The synthesis of a series of mono(amido-diphosphine) lanthanoid complexes,
MCl₂ [N(SiMe₂CH₂PR₂)₂], (R = Me, Ph, Pr', Bu[symbol omitted]) has also been achieved.
Complexes of the type, MCl₂[N(SiMe₂CH₂PMe₂)₂], are insoluble in hydrocarbon
solvents, presumably because they are oligomeric in nature. They will however,
dissolve in THF probably forming seven-coordinate bis(THF) monomers. Attempts to alkylate these compounds generally led to decomposition; the cyclometallated bis(ligand) complex, M[N(SiMe₂CHPMe₂)(SiMe₂CH₂PMe₂)] [N(SiMe2CH2PMe2)2], was identified as the major product. A route to a dimeric mono(amido-diphosphine) allyl complex, {YCl(allyl)[N(SiMe₂CH₂PMe₂)₂]}₂ (characterized by crystallography) was found via the reaction of allyl-MgCl or Mg(allyl)₂(dioxane) with YCl[N(SiMe₂CH₂PMe₂)₂]₂. The mono(ligand) complexes containing bulky
phosphine donors (R = Ph, Bu[symbol omitted], Pr[symbol omitted]) are soluble in hydrocarbon solvents; YCl₂[N(SiMe₂CH₂PPr[symbol omitted]₂)₂] can be isolated as either a THF adduct or as the base-free dimer.
A new reaction, mediated by a zirconium or hafnium amido-diphosphine complex, where allyl and butadiene moieties are coupled together to generate a coordinated [ɳ⁴:ɳ¹-CH₂=CHCH=CHCH₂CH₂CH₂]¹- fragment has been investigated. The process is very sensitive to the nature of the ancillary ligands at the metal. For MCl(ɳ⁴-C₄H₆)[N(SiMe₂CH₂PR₂)₂] complexes, after the addition of allylMgCl, the transformation takes about one hour when M = Hf & R = Pr[symbol omitted], two hours when M = Zr & R = Pr[symbol omitted], a week when M = Hf & R = Me, and results only in decomposition when M = Zr & R = Me. Similarly, for the zirconium mediated coupling of 1-methylallyl with butadiene, when R = Me, decomposition occurs and when R = Pr[symbol omitted], after two hours the coupling is complete. Two of the four possible coupled products are formed in unequal amounts, and the coupling occurs exclusively at the substituted end of the 1-methylallyl unit as determined by X-ray crystallography. Which diastereomer is formed in excess was not determined.
The reduction of ZrCl₃[N(SiMe₂CH₂PR₂)₂] (R = Pr[symbol omitted] or Bu[symbol omitted]) with Na/Hg amalgam under nitrogen results in the formation of a binuclear zirconium dinitrogen complex, {ZrCl[N(SiMe₂CH₂PR₂)₂]}₂ (μ-ɳ²:ɳ²-N₂). X-ray crystallography (for R = Pr[symbol omitted]) reveals that the N₂ ligand is symmetrically bound in a side-on fashion to both metals. In addition, the N—N bond length of 1.548 (7) Å, the longest bond length ever reported for a dinitrogen complex, indicates that the dinitrogen has been reduced to a N₂⁴⁻ hydrazido ligand. Protonation of the complex with HCl results in a quantitative formation of hydrazine. / Science, Faculty of / Chemistry, Department of / Graduate

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:UBC/oai:circle.library.ubc.ca:2429/31012
Date January 1990
CreatorsHaddad, Timothy Samir
PublisherUniversity of British Columbia
Source SetsUniversity of British Columbia
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeText, Thesis/Dissertation
RightsFor non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.

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