This study reports the synthesis and single-crystal X-ray crystallographic, NMR spectroscopic, and magnetic characterization of a series of sodium ferrates using bis(amide) Fe(HMDS)2 as a precursor (HMDS = 1,1,1,3,3,3-hexamethyldisilazide). Reaction with sodium reagents NaHMDS and NaCH2SiMe3 in hexane afforded donor-solvent-free sodium ferrates [{NaFe(HMDS)3}∞] (1) and [{NaFe(HMDS)2(CH2SiMe3)}∞] (2), respectively, which exhibit contacted ion pair structures, giving rise to new polymeric chain arrangements made up of a combination of inter- and intramolecular Na···Me(HMDS) electrostatic interactions. Addition of the unsaturated NHC IPr (IPr = 1,3-bis(2,6-diisopropylphenyl)imidazol-2-ylidene) to 1 and 2 caused deaggregation of their polymeric structures to form discrete NHC-stabilized solvent-separated ion pairs [Na(IPr)2](+)[Fe(HMDS)3](-) (3) and [(THF)3·NaIPr](+)[Fe(HMDS)2CH2SiMe3](-) (4), where in both cases, the NHC ligand coordinates preferentially to Na. In contrast, when IPr is sequentially reacted with the single-metal reagents NaCH2SiMe3 and Fe(HMDS)2, the novel heteroleptic ferrate (THF)3Na[:C{[N(2,6-(i)Pr2C6H3)]2CHCFe(HMDS)2}] (5) is obtained. This contains an anionic NHC ligand acting as an unsymmetrical bridge between the two metals, coordinating through its abnormal C4 position to Fe and its normal C2 position to Na. The formation of 5 can be described as an indirect ferration process where IPr is first metalated at the C4 position by the polar sodium alkyl reagent, which in turn undergoes transmetalation to the more electronegative Fe(HMDS)2 fragment. Treatment of 5 with 1 molar equiv of methyl triflate (MeOTf) led to the isolation and structural elucidation of the neutral abnormal NHC (aNHC) tricoordinate iron complex [CH3C{[N(2,6-iPr2C6H3)]2CHCFe(HMDS)2}] (6) with the subsequent elimination of NaOTf, disclosing the selectivity of complex 5 to react with this electrophile via its C2 position, leaving its Fe-C4 and Fe-N bonds intact. The magnetic susceptibility properties of compounds 1-6 have been examined. This study revealed a drastic change of magnetic susceptibility in replacing a pure σ donor from an idealized trigonal coordination environment by an NHC π donating character.
Pairing iron bis(amide) Fe(HMDS) 2 with Na-(HMDS) to form new sodium ferrate base [(dioxane) 0.5 ·NaFe-(HMDS) 3 ]( 1)e nables regioselective mono and di-ferration (via direct FeÀHexchange) of awide range of fluoroaromatic substrates under mild reaction conditions.T rapping of several ferrated intermediates has provided key insight into how synchronised Na/Fecooperation operates in these transformations.F urthermore,u sing excess 1 at 80 8 8Cs witches on ar emarkable cascade process inducing the collective twofold CÀH/threefold CÀFbond activations,where eachC ÀHbond is transformed to aC ÀFe bond whereas each CÀFb ond is transformed into aC À Nb ond.
Exploiting cooperative effects between Na and Fe II centres present in tris(amide) ferrate complexes has led to the chemoselective ferration of pentafluorobenzene, benzene, toluene, anisole, and pyridine being realised at room temperature. The importance of this bimetallic partnership is demonstrated by neither the relevant sodium amide (NaHMDS or NaTMP) nor the Fe II amide Fe(HMDS) 2 efficiently metallating these substrates under the conditions of this study. By combining NMR studies with the isolation of key intermediates and DFT calculations, we offer a possible mechanism for how these reactions take place, uncovering a surprising reaction pathway in which the metals cooperate in a synchronised manner. Although the isolated products are formally the result of Fe-H exchange, theoretical calculations indicate that the aromatic substrates undergo Na-H exchange followed by fast intramolecular transmetallation to Fe, thus stabilizing the newly generated aryl fragment.Heterobimetallic amide bases containing a complementary combination of an alkali metal with a less electropositive metal, such as Mg or Zn, have emerged as a powerful class of reagents for selectively deprotonating functionalised arenes. [1] Profiting from the cooperation between the two metals, these bimetallic strategies can offer greater functional group tolerance and special regioselectivities that conventional single-metal bases cannot match. [2] Through the isolation
This version is available at https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/60604/ Strathprints is designed to allow users to access the research output of the University of Strathclyde. Unless otherwise explicitly stated on the manuscript, Copyright © and Moral Rights for the papers on this site are retained by the individual authors and/or other copyright owners. Please check the manuscript for details of any other licences that may have been applied. You may not engage in further distribution of the material for any profitmaking activities or any commercial gain. You may freely distribute both the url (https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/) and the content of this paper for research or private study, educational, or not-for-profit purposes without prior permission or charge.Any correspondence concerning this service should be sent to the Strathprints administrator: strathprints@strath.ac.ukThe Strathprints institutional repository (https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk) is a digital archive of University of Strathclyde research outputs. It has been developed to disseminate open access research outputs, expose data about those outputs, and enable the management and persistent access to Strathclyde's intellectual output. Using a transamination approach to access novel Fe(II) complexes, this study presents the synthesis, X-ray crystallographic and magnetic characterisation of a series of new iron complexes containing the multifunctional 2,2-dipyridylamide (DPA) ligand using iron bis(amide) [{Fe(HMDS)2}2] and sodium ferrate [{NaFe(HMDS)3} ] (1) as precursors (HMDS = 1,1,1,3,3,3hexamethyldisilazide). Reactions of DPA(H) with 1 show exceptionally good stoichiometric control, allowing access to heteroleptic [(THF)2·NaFe(DPA)(HMDS)2] (3) and homoleptic [{THF·NaFe(DPA)3} ] (4) by using 1 and 3 equivalents of DPA(H) respectively. Linking this methodology and co-complexation, which is a more widely used approach to prepare heterobimetallic complexes, 3 can also be prepared by combining NaHMDS with heteroleptic [{Fe(DPA)(HMDS)}2] (2). In turn, 2 has been also synthesised and structurally defined by reacting [{Fe(HMDS)2}2] with two equivalents of DPA(H). Structural studies demonstrate the coordination flexibility of the N-bridged bis(heterocycle) ligand DPA, with 2 and 3 exhibiting discrete monomeric motifs, whereas 4 displays a much more intricate supramolecular structure, with one of its DPA ligands coordinating in an anti/anti fashion (as opposed to 2 and 3 where DPA shows a syn/syn conformation), which facilitates propagation of the structure via its central amido N. Magnetic studies confirmed the high-spin electron configuration of the iron(II) centres in all three compounds and revealed the existence of weak ferromagnetic interactions in dinuclear compound 2 (J = 1.01 cm -1 ). Journal Name ARTICLE
While fluoroaryl fragments are ubiquitous in many pharmaceuticals, the deprotonation of fluoroarenes using organolithium bases constitutes an important challenge in polar organometallic chemistry. This has been widely attributed to the low stability of the in situ generated aryl lithium intermediates that even at –78 °C can undergo unwanted side reactions. Herein, pairing lithium amide LiHMDS (HMDS = N{SiMe3}2) with FeII(HMDS)2 enables the selective deprotonation at room temperature of pentafluorobenzene and 1,3,5-trifluorobenzene via the mixed-metal base [(dioxane)LiFe(HMDS)3] (1) (dioxane = 1,4-dioxane). Structural elucidation of the organometallic intermediates [(dioxane)Li(HMDS)2Fe(ArF)] (ArF = C6F5, 2; 1,3,5-F3-C6H2, 3) prior electrophilic interception demonstrates that these deprotonations are actually ferrations, with Fe occupying the position previously filled by a hydrogen atom. Notwithstanding, the presence of lithium is essential for the reactions to take place as Fe II (HMDS)2 on its own is completely inert towards the metallation of these substrates. Interestingly 2 and 3 are thermally stable and they do not undergo benzyne formation via LiF elimination.
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