1992
DOI: 10.1021/ja00050a063
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Tuning the stereochemistry of pentacoordinate cobalt(III) halide complexes: a rare case of trigonal bipyramidal stereochemistry for cobalt(III)

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Cited by 31 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…This clearly suggests that the structure of Co(III) complex 1 is a trigonal-bipyramid with high spin state or a square-pyramid with an intermediate one. 55 It is consistent with the crystal structure of 1 with trigonal-bipyramidal geometry as mentioned before. These findings suggest that complex 1 has a four-coordinate squareplanar, 38,39 five-coordinate square-pyramidal, or five-coordinate trigonal-bipyramidal structure in solution.…”
Section: ■ Experimental Sectionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…This clearly suggests that the structure of Co(III) complex 1 is a trigonal-bipyramid with high spin state or a square-pyramid with an intermediate one. 55 It is consistent with the crystal structure of 1 with trigonal-bipyramidal geometry as mentioned before. These findings suggest that complex 1 has a four-coordinate squareplanar, 38,39 five-coordinate square-pyramidal, or five-coordinate trigonal-bipyramidal structure in solution.…”
Section: ■ Experimental Sectionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…The low-spin nature of these Co(III) complexes is ostensibly due to the presence of strong-field aryl ligands in the coordination sphere of Co. A comparison can be drawn with the report of Lippard et al on five-coordinate Co(III) complexes of the type (NNNN)CoX, where NNNN is a dianionic, tetradentate tropocoronand ligand. 56 In their case, X = Cl corresponded to a paramagnetic Co(III) center whereas X = alkyl corresponded to a diamagnetic Co(III). Fivecoordinate, low-spin Co(III) compounds with acyl and alkenyl donors were also reported by Klein et al 57 X-ray Structural Studies.…”
Section: ■ Introductionmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…Most of these are systems with electron-rich, often anionic ligands, and many are derived from macrocyclic ligand systems, [7][8][9][10][11] largely as a result of extensive modeling studies of vitamin B 12 . [12,13] Para-as well as diamagnetic square-pyramidal [14] and trigonal-bipyramidal [8] systems have been reported, and, in the course of the search for the elusive Co = O functional group, [15] a tetracoordinate amido-Co III complex was also structurally characterized. [11] All these complexes have interesting reactivities that are not observed in classical Co III systems, such as the efficient production of alkyl radicals [16] and CÀH activation.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%