Isolation of a triplet benzene dianion

Baird’s rule predicts that molecules with 4 n π electrons should be aromatic in the triplet state, but the realization of simple ring systems with such an electronic ground state has been stymied by these molecules’ tendency to distort into structures bearing a large singlet–triplet gap. Here, we sh...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature chemistry 2021-10, Vol.13 (10), p.1001-1005
Hauptverfasser: Gould, Colin A., Marbey, Jonathan, Vieru, Veacheslav, Marchiori, David A., David Britt, R., Chibotaru, Liviu F., Hill, Stephen, Long, Jeffrey R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Baird’s rule predicts that molecules with 4 n π electrons should be aromatic in the triplet state, but the realization of simple ring systems with such an electronic ground state has been stymied by these molecules’ tendency to distort into structures bearing a large singlet–triplet gap. Here, we show that the elusive benzene diradical dianion can be stabilized through creation of a binucleating ligand that enforces a tightly constrained inverse sandwich structure and direct magnetic exchange coupling. Specifically, we report the compounds [K(18-crown-6)(THF) 2 ] 2 [M 2 (BzN 6 -Mes)] (M = Y, Gd; BzN 6 -Mes = 1,3,5-tris[2′,6′-( N -mesityl)dimethanamino-4′- tert -butylphenyl]benzene), which feature a trigonal ligand that binds one trivalent metal ion on each face of a central benzene dianion. Antiferromagnetic exchange in the Gd 3+ compound preferentially stabilizes the triplet state such that it becomes the molecular ground state. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction data and nucleus-independent chemical shift calculations support aromaticity, in agreement with Baird’s rule. Molecules with 4 n π electrons should display Baird aromaticity in the triplet state, but isolation of ring systems with this electronic ground state is stymied by structural distortion. Now, a benzene diradical dianion has been stabilized by being held rigid in a binucleating ligand as well as through magnetic exchange; single-crystal X-ray diffraction data and NICS calculations support its ground-state Baird aromaticity.
ISSN:1755-4330
1755-4349
DOI:10.1038/s41557-021-00737-8