p-(Dimethylamino)phenyl pentazole, DMAP-N5 (DMAP = Me2N-C6H4), was characterized by picosecond transient infrared spectroscopy and infrared spectroelectrochemistry. Femtosecond laser excitation at 310 or 330 nm produces the DMAP-N5 (S1) excited state, part of which returns to the ground state (τ = 82 ± 4 ps), while DMAP-N and DMAP-N3 (S0) are generated as double and single N2-loss photoproducts with η ≈ 0.14. The lifetime of DMAP-N5 (S1) is temperature and solvent dependent. [DMAP-N3](+) is produced from DMAP-N5 in a quasireversible, one-electron oxidation process (E1/2 = +0.67 V). Control experiments with DMAP-N3 support the findings. DFT B3LYP/6-311G** calculations were used to identify DMAP-N5 (S1), DMAP-N3(+), and DMAP-N in the infrared spectra. Both DMAP-N5 (S1) and [DMAP-N5](+) have a weakened N5 ring structure.
The first charge-neutral Lewis base adducts of tin(IV) tetraazide, [Sn(N3)4(bpy)], [Sn(N3)4(phen)] and [Sn(N3)4(py)2], and the salt bis{bis(triphenylphosphine)iminium} hexa(azido)stannate [(PPN)2Sn(N3)6] (bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine; phen = 1,10-phenanthroline; py = pyridine; PPN = N(PPh3)2) have been prepared using covalent or ionic azide-transfer reagents and ligand-exchange reactions. The azides were isolated on the 0.3 to 1 g scale and characterized by IR and NMR spectroscopies, microanalytical and thermal methods and their molecular structures determined by single-crystal XRD. All complexes have a distorted octahedral Sn[N]6 coordination geometry and possess greater thermal stability than their Si and Ge homologues. The nitrogen content of the adducts of up to 44% exceed any Sn(IV) compound known hitherto.
The first two examples of the class of tetracoordinate low-valent, mixed-ligand tin azido complexes, Sn(N)(L), are shown to form upon reaction of SnCl with NaN and SnF with MeSiN in either pyridine or 4-picoline (2, L = py; 3, L = pic). These adducts of Sn(N) are shock- and friction-insensitive and stable at r.t. under an atmosphere of pyridine or picoline, respectively. A new, fast, and efficient method for the preparation of Sn(N) (1) directly from SnF, and by the stepwise de-coordination of py from 2 at r.t., is reported that yields 1 in microcrystalline form, permitting powder X-ray diffraction studies. Reaction of 1 with a nonbulky cationic H-bond donor forms the salt-like compound {C(NH)}Sn(N) (4) which is comparably stable despite its high nitrogen content (55%) and the absence of bulky weakly coordinating cations that are conventionally deemed essential in related systems of homoleptic azido metallates. The spectroscopic and crystallographic characterization of the polyazides 1-4 provides insight into azide-based H-bonded networks and unravels the previously unknown structure of 1 as an important lighter binary azide homologue of Pb(N). The atomic coordinates for 1 and 2-4 were derived from powder and single crystal XRD data, respectively; those for 1 are consistent with predictions made by DFT-D calculations under periodic boundary conditions.
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