The metals of the s block of the periodic table are well known to be exceptional electron donors, and the vast majority of their molecular complexes therefore contain these metals in their fully oxidized form. Low-valent main-group compounds have recently become desirable synthetic targets owing to their interesting reactivities, sometimes on a par with those of transition-metal complexes. In this work, we used stabilizing cyclic (alkyl)(amino)carbene ligands to isolate and characterize the first neutral compounds that contain a zero-valent s-block metal, beryllium. These brightly coloured complexes display very short beryllium-carbon bond lengths and linear beryllium coordination geometries, indicative of strong multiple Be-C bonding. Structural, spectroscopic and theoretical results show that the complexes adopt a closed-shell singlet configuration with a Be(0) metal centre. The surprising stability of the molecule can be ascribed to an unusually strong three-centre two-electron π bond across the C-Be-C unit.
The complexation of two equivalents of a cyclic (alkyl)(amino)carbene (CAAC) to tetrabromodiborane, followed by reduction with four equivalents of sodium naphthalide, led to the formation of the CAAC-stabilized linear diboracumulene (CAAC)2B2. The capacity of the CAAC ligand to facilitate B2 →CAAC donation of π-electron density resulted in important differences between this species and a previously reported complex featuring a B≡B triple bond stabilized by cyclic di(amino)carbenes, including a longer B-B bond and shorter B-C bonds. Frontier orbital analysis indicated sharing of valence electrons across the entire linear C-B-B-C unit in (CAAC)2B2, which is supported by natural population analysis and cyclic voltammetry.
Many metal-containing compounds, and some metal-free compounds, will bind carbon monoxide. However, only a handful of metal-containing compounds have been shown to induce the coupling of two or more CO molecules, potentially a method for the use of CO as a one-carbon-atom building block for the synthesis of organic molecules. In this work, CO was added to a boron-boron triple bond at room temperature and atmospheric pressure, resulting in a compound into which four equivalents of CO are incorporated: a flat, bicyclic, bis(boralactone). By the controlled addition of one CO to the diboryne compound, an intermediate in the CO coupling reaction was isolated and structurally characterized. Electrochemical measurements confirm the strongly reducing nature of the diboryne compound.
A new compound with the formula L-B2-L wherein the stabilizing ligand (L) is 1,3-bis[diisopropylphenyl]-4,5-dihydroimidazol-2-ylidene (SIDip) has been synthesized, isolated, and characterized. The π-acidity of the SIDip ligand, intermediate between the relatively non-acidic IDip (1,3-bis[diisopropylphenyl]imidazol-2-ylidene) ligand and the much more highly acidic CAAC (1-[2,6-diisopropylphenyl]-3,3,5,5-tetramethylpyrrolidin-2-ylidene) ligand, gives rise to a compound with spectroscopic, electrochemical, and structural properties between those of L-B2-L compounds stabilized by CAAC and IDip. Reactions of all three L-B2-L compounds with CO demonstrate the differences caused by their respective ligands, as the π-acidities of the CAAC and SIDip carbenes enabled the isolation of bis(boraketene) compounds (L(OC)B-B(CO)L), which could not be isolated from reactions with B2(IDip)2. However, only B2(IDip)2 and B2(SIDip)2 could be converted into bicyclic bis(boralactone) compounds.
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