Attaining Exceptional Stable Copper(I) Metallacyclopentadiene Diradicaloids through Ligand Engineering

Diradicaloids are generally high-energy molecules with open-shell configuration and are quite reactive. In this work, we report a feasible synthetic approach to attaining exceptionally stable copper(I) metallacyclopentadiene diradicaloids through ligand engineering. Copper(I)-hybrid cyclopentadiene...

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Veröffentlicht in:Inorganic chemistry 2023-11, Vol.62 (47), p.19323-19331
Hauptverfasser: Jin, Xu-Yuan, Wang, Jin-Yun, Yang, Xin, Chen, Zhong-Ning
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Diradicaloids are generally high-energy molecules with open-shell configuration and are quite reactive. In this work, we report a feasible synthetic approach to attaining exceptionally stable copper(I) metallacyclopentadiene diradicaloids through ligand engineering. Copper(I)-hybrid cyclopentadiene diradicaloids 1c-6c that absorb intensely in visible regions were successfully prepared in stoichiometrical yields under UV light irradiation. The diradicaloids originate from the C-C bonding coupling of two side-by-side-arranged ethynyl groups in complexes 1-6 upon photocyclization. By rational selection of substituents in triphosphine ligands, we systematically modulate the kinetic behavior of diradicaloids 1c-6c in the thermal decoloration process. With precise ligand design, we are able to obtain exceptionally stable copper(I)-hybrid cyclopentadiene diradicaloids with a half-life as long as ca. 40 h in CH2Cl2 solution at ambient temperature. As demonstrated by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and variable-temperature magnetic studies, the diradicaloids manifest a singlet ground state, but they are readily populated to a triplet excited state through thermal activation in view of a small singlet-triplet energy gap of -0.39 kcal mol-1. The diradicaloids show two-step quasi-reversible reduction waves at about -0.5 and -1.0 V ascribed to successive one-electron-accepting processes, coinciding perfectly with the characteristics of diradicals.
ISSN:0020-1669
1520-510X
DOI:10.1021/acs.inorgchem.3c03067