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Metallodithiolate ligands as building blocks for molecular constructions

NiN2S2 moieties have been used as a unique class of ligand in organometallic
chemistry behaving as innocent mono- and bidentate ligands to metals bound via their
thiolate sulfur donor atoms. We have established the donor ability of these ligands with
respect to conventional ligands, e.g., diphosphines and diimines, by synthesizing a series
of (NiN2S2)W(CO)4 complexes and using infrared spectroscopy to obtain the ν(CO)
stretching frequencies as a report of the electron density on the metal. In comparison to
the analogous tungsten complexes utilizing traditional ligands, the NiN2S2 ligands were
found to be far better donors than the diphosphines as evidenced by significantly lower
ν(CO) values, and much closer to diimine ligands.
Sulfur’s ability to form aggregates is well documented. The metallodithiolate
ligands Ni-1 and Ni-1' have been used resulting in numerous molecular constructions,
specifically C3 and C4 paddlewheels of the composition M2Nix. Whereas many
paddlewheels in the literature employing NiN2S2 ligands were formed largely
unintended, a synthetic approach was designed utilizing multiply-bonded dimetal units
of various bond orders. These explorations have extended the range of metal-metal
distances accommodated by NiN2S2 units in our library from 2.14 Å to 4.35 Å. The complexes discussed in this dissertation are polymetallic clusters with high
positive charges associated with them. Electrochemical studies reveal that the redox
activity of the NiN2S2 unit can be deconvoluted from the dimetal unit and that sulfur
metallation causes the reduction potential of the NiN2S2 ligand (approximately -2.0 V) to
become more positive. With each subsequent reduction, the overall positive charge is
lessened which causes the corresponding reduction potentials to be more negative.
Solvent dependent studies suggest a partial dissociation of the NiN2S2 ligand reminiscent
of the mechanism calculated for Acetyl CoA Synthase. Mixed-ligand species proved
unstable in any solvent.
As rhodium is an intrinsically catalytic metal, investigations were performed to
observe if stable complexes could be prepared to serve as models to study industrially
relevant processes. The metalloligands Ni-1 and Ni-1' were found to stabilize multiple
oxidation states of rhodium resulting in structural forms such as a heterobimetallic (RhI),
a C4 paddlewheel (RhII), and tetrametallic analog to Rubpy (RhIII).

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1707
Date02 June 2009
CreatorsJeffery, Stephen Paul
ContributorsDarensbourg, Marcetta Y.
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Formatelectronic, application/pdf, born digital

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