Axial ligation of nickel(II) 5,10,15,20-tetraphenylporphyrin (NiTPP) with pyrrolidine or piperidine has been investigated using X-ray crystallography, UV-visible spectroscopy, resonance Raman spectroscopy, and molecular mechanics (MM) calculations. By varying the pyrrolidine concentration in dichloromethane, distinct nu(4) Raman lines are found for the four-, five-, and six-coordinate species of NiTPP. The equilibrium constants for addition of the first and second pyrrolidine axial ligands are 1.1 and 3.8 M(-)(1), respectively. The axial ligands and their orientations influence the type and magnitude of the calculated nonplanar distortion. The differences in the calculated energies of the conformers having different ligand rotational angles are small so they may coexist in solution. Because of the similarity in macrocyclic structural parameters of these conformers and the free rotation of the axial ligands, narrow and symmetric nu(2) and nu(8) Raman lines are observed. Nonetheless, the normal-coordinate structural-decomposition analysis of the nonplanar distortions of the calculated structures and the crystal structure of the bis(piperidine) complex reveals a relationship between the orientations of axial ligand(s) and the macrocyclic distortions. For the five-coordinate complex with the plane of the axial ligand bisecting the Ni-N(pyrrole) bonds, a primarily ruffled deformation results. With the ligand plane eclipsing the Ni-N(pyrrole) bonds, a mainly saddled deformation occurs. With the addition of the second axial ligand, the small doming of the five-coordinate complexes disappears, and ruffling or saddling deformations change depending on the relative orientation of the two axial ligands. The crystal structure of the NiTPP bis(piperidine) complex shows a macrocycle distortion composed of wav(x) and wav(y) symmetric deformations, but no ruffling, saddling, or doming. The difference in the calculated and observed distortions results partly from the phenyl group orientation imposed by crystal packing forces. MM calculations predict three stable conformers (ruf, sad, and planar) for four-coordinate NiTPP, and resonance Raman evidence for these conformers was given previously.
An intermediate-spin state very close to the mid-spin state (S = 3/2) can be stabilized in a ferric porphyrin by an integrated approach which combines the favorable effects of a weak axial field strength and of a small macrocycle hole. Axial ligand exchange by reaction of chloroiron(III)tetramethylchiroporphyrin [(TMCP)FeCl] with silver perchlorate in ethanol-chloroform leads to ethanol-ligated ferric chiroporphyrins. Two distinct crystalline products containing a bisethanol complex [[(TMCP)FeIII(EtOH)2]ClO4] and three variants of a mixed ethanol-water complex [[(TMCP)FeIII(EtOH)(H2O)]ClO4] have been structurally characterized in the solid state. The small hole of the ruffled chiroporphyrin and the weak axial oxygen ligation result in strongly tetragonally distorted complexes. The six-coordinate species exhibit long axial Fe-O bond distances (2.173(5)-2.272(4) A) and the shortest equatorial Fe-N(av) distances (1.950(5)-1.978(7) A) found as yet in a ferric porphyrin, reflecting a singly occupied dz2 orbital and a largely depopulated dx2-y2 orbital. An intriguing case of bond-stretch isomerism is seen for the axial Fe-O bonds in two crystallographically independent mixed ethanol-water species, and it is accounted for by their distinct intra- and intermolecular hydrogen-bond arrays. The Mössbauer spectrum (delta = 0.35(1) mm s-1 and delta EQ = 3.79(1) mm s-1 at 77 K) indicates a strong tetragonal distortion around the ferric ion, in agreement with the structural data. The value of the magnetic moment (mu eff = 3.8 mu B in the range 50-300 K) strongly supports a mid-spin state (S = 3/2). The EPR spectrum at 80 K (g perpendicular approximately 4.0, g parallel approximately 2.00) is consistent with a nearly pure mid-spin state (4A2) with little rhombic distortion. The 1H NMR spectra in CDCl3-EtOH exhibit upfield-shifted resonances for the pyrrole protons (delta approximately -30 ppm) which are consistent with the depopulated iron dx2-y2 orbital. Solution equilibria with water and various alcohols, and the spin state of the corresponding species, are discussed on the basis of the NMR data. The bisethanol and ethanol-water species are potential models of unknown hemoprotein ligation states such as Tyr(OH)/Tyr(OH) or Tyr(OH)/H2O that could be obtained by site-directed mutagenesis.
Hydrogen loss from the 7 skeletal electron pair (sep) nido 2-Cp*H3WB4H8, 1 (Cp* = η-C5Me5), the metal analogue of pentaborane (9), has been examined as a potential source of unsaturated, reactive species. Pyrolysis of 1 leads to 6 skeletal electron pair (Cp*W)2B5H9, 2 (45%), 7 sep Cp*3W3(μ-H)B8H8 3 (19%), and 7 sep (Cp*W)2B7H9, 4 (low yield), whereas photolysis gives 2 (52%) and 4 (7%). Compound 2 is known, and 3 and 4 have been spectroscopically and crystallographically characterized. Further, the isoelectronic and nearly isostructural analogue of 4, (Cp*Re)2B7H7, 5, has been prepared from the reaction of Cp*ReCl4 and BH3·THF in 66% yield. It is demonstrated that 3 exhibits a skeletal structure corresponding to a highly capped W3 bonded triangle and is analogous to a known multinuclear Ru11 cluster with a hexagonal close packed metal core. As such it constitutes an example of a closed, boron-rich metallaborane cluster with (n − 4) sep. Likewise, it is shown that 4 and 5 possess unusual structures and constitute examples of closed metallaborane clusters with (n − 2) sep. Fenske−Hall MO calculations show that the observed cluster shapes are appropriate for the observed sep's. These two new cluster types demonstrate that transition metal fragments can be used to manipulate the cluster bonding network of a borane, effectively collapsing a single cage into a more closely packed network.
Geometric and molecular orbital analyses of the metallaboranes (Cp*Re) 2 B 7 H 7 and (Cp*W) 2 B 7 H 9 , which display unusual, but identical, core structures and skeletal electron pair counts of n 2 2, demonstrate a close connection between these molecular compounds and anionic, hypoelectronic main-group clusters found in the solid state.
The crystal structure of [Fe(C36H44N4)(NO3)] has been determined in the space group P1. The unit cell contains two molecules. The Fe atom is displaced out of the porphyrin plane by 0.50 A, the average Fe-Np distance is 2.056 (1) A (where Np is a porphyrin N atom) and the Fe-O(NO3) bond length is 2.016 (3) A.
The effect of a sixth ligand in a series of low-spin thiocarbonyl-ligated iron(II)octaethylporphyrinates has been investigated. Six-coordinate complexes have been synthesized and characterized by Mössbauer and infrared spectroscopy and single-crystal X-ray structure determinations. The results are compared with the five-coordinate parent complex. The crystal structures of [Fe(OEP)(CS)(1-MeIm)] and [Fe(OEP)(CS)(Py)] are reported and discussed. The 1-methylimidazole and pyridine derivatives exhibit Fe-C(CS) bond distances of 1.703(4) and 1.706(2) A that are significantly longer than the 1.662(3) A reported for five-coordinate [Fe(OEP)(CS)] (Scheidt, W. R.; Geiger, D. K. Inorg. Chem. 1982, 21, 1208). The trans Fe-N(ligand) distances of 2.112(3) and 2.1550(15) A observed for the 1-methylimidazole and pyridine complex are approximately 0.13 A longer than those observed for analogous bis-ligated complexes and are consistent with a significant structural trans effect for the CS ligand. Mössbauer investigations carried out for five- and six-coordinate thiocarbonyl derivatives with several different sixth axial ligands reveal interesting features. All derivatives exhibit very small isomer shift values, consistent with a very strong interaction between iron and CS. The five-coordinate derivative has delta(Fe) = 0.08 mm/s, and the six-coordinate complexes exhibit delta(Fe) = 0.14 to 0.19 mm/s at 4.2 K. The five-coordinate complex shows a large quadrupole splitting (DeltaE(q) = 1.93 mm/s at 4.2 K) which is reduced on coordination of the sixth ligand (DeltaE(q) = 0.42-0.80 mm/s at 4.2 K). Addition of a sixth ligand also leads to a small decrease in the value of nu(CS). Correlations in structural, IR, and Mössbauer results suggest that the sixth ligand effect is primarily induced by changes in sigma-bonding. The structure of [Fe(OEP)(CS)(CH(3)OH)] is briefly reported. Crystal data: [Fe(OEP)(CS)(1-MeIm)] crystallizes in the monoclinic system, space group P2(1)/n, Z = 4, a = 9.5906(5) A, b = 16.704(4) A, c = 23.1417(6) A, beta = 100.453(7) degrees. [Fe(OEP)(CS)(Py)] crystallizes in the triclinic system, space group P1, Z = 5, a = 13.9073(6) A, b = 16.2624(7) A, c = 22.0709(9) A, alpha = 70.586(1) degrees, beta = 77.242(1) degrees, gamma = 77.959(1) degrees. [Fe(OEP)(CS)(CH(3)OH)] crystallizes in the triclinic system, space group P1, Z = 1, a = 9.0599(5) A, b = 9.4389(5) A, c = 11.0676(6) A, alpha = 90.261(1) degrees, beta = 100.362(1) degrees, gamma = 114.664(1) degrees.
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