The Electronic Structure and Photochemistry of Group 6 Bimetallic (Fischer) Carbene Complexes: Beyond the Photocarbonylation Reaction

The UV spectra of Group 6 metal carbene complexes bearing a CpM(CO)3 (Cp=cyclopentadienyl) moiety bonded to the carbene carbon atom exhibit a redshift of the absorption maxima at higher wavelengths with respect to the parent monometallic complexes. This redshift is partly due to a higher occupation...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemistry : a European journal 2010-06, Vol.16 (22), p.6616-6624
Hauptverfasser: Lage, Marta L., Fernández, Israel, Mancheño, María J., Gómez-Gallego, Mar, Sierra, Miguel A.
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container_issue 22
container_start_page 6616
container_title Chemistry : a European journal
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creator Lage, Marta L.
Fernández, Israel
Mancheño, María J.
Gómez-Gallego, Mar
Sierra, Miguel A.
description The UV spectra of Group 6 metal carbene complexes bearing a CpM(CO)3 (Cp=cyclopentadienyl) moiety bonded to the carbene carbon atom exhibit a redshift of the absorption maxima at higher wavelengths with respect to the parent monometallic complexes. This redshift is partly due to a higher occupation on the pz atomic orbital of the carbene carbon atom. Time‐dependent DFT calculations accurately assign this band to a metal‐to‐ligand charge‐transfer transition, thus showing that the presence of a second metal center does not affect the nature of the transition. However, the photochemical reactivity of Group 6 metal carbene complexes bearing a CpM(CO)3 moiety strongly depends on the nature of this metal fragment. A new photoslippage reaction leading to fulvenes occurs when Mn‐derived products 11 a, 11 b, and 12 a are irradiated (both Cr and W derivatives), whereas Re‐derived product 11 c behaves like standard Fischer complexes and yields the usual photocarbonylation products. A new photoreduction process occurring in the metallacyclopropanone intermediate is also observed for these complexes. Both computational and deuteration experiments support this unprecedented photoslippage process. The key to this differential photoreactivity seems to be the M–Cp back‐donation, which hampers the slippage process for Re derivatives and favors the carbonylation reaction. Given the slip: A new photochemical reaction is observed for cyclopentadienylmanganese‐substituted Fischer carbenes. The reaction proceeds through a previously unreported photoslippage process (see scheme), and renders fulvenes as the only reaction products. Both computational and experimental results confirm the proposed mechanism.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/chem.200903042
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This redshift is partly due to a higher occupation on the pz atomic orbital of the carbene carbon atom. Time‐dependent DFT calculations accurately assign this band to a metal‐to‐ligand charge‐transfer transition, thus showing that the presence of a second metal center does not affect the nature of the transition. However, the photochemical reactivity of Group 6 metal carbene complexes bearing a CpM(CO)3 moiety strongly depends on the nature of this metal fragment. A new photoslippage reaction leading to fulvenes occurs when Mn‐derived products 11 a, 11 b, and 12 a are irradiated (both Cr and W derivatives), whereas Re‐derived product 11 c behaves like standard Fischer complexes and yields the usual photocarbonylation products. A new photoreduction process occurring in the metallacyclopropanone intermediate is also observed for these complexes. Both computational and deuteration experiments support this unprecedented photoslippage process. The key to this differential photoreactivity seems to be the M–Cp back‐donation, which hampers the slippage process for Re derivatives and favors the carbonylation reaction. Given the slip: A new photochemical reaction is observed for cyclopentadienylmanganese‐substituted Fischer carbenes. The reaction proceeds through a previously unreported photoslippage process (see scheme), and renders fulvenes as the only reaction products. 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The key to this differential photoreactivity seems to be the M–Cp back‐donation, which hampers the slippage process for Re derivatives and favors the carbonylation reaction. Given the slip: A new photochemical reaction is observed for cyclopentadienylmanganese‐substituted Fischer carbenes. The reaction proceeds through a previously unreported photoslippage process (see scheme), and renders fulvenes as the only reaction products. 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subjects bimetallic complexes
carbenes
density functional calculations
electronic structure
photochemistry
title The Electronic Structure and Photochemistry of Group 6 Bimetallic (Fischer) Carbene Complexes: Beyond the Photocarbonylation Reaction
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