Imidazolylidene Cu(II) Complexes: Synthesis Using Imidazolium Carboxylate Precursors and Structure Rearrangement Pathways
Author(s) -
Nathalie Ségaud,
Jonathan McMaster,
Gerard van Koten,
Martin Albrecht
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
inorganic chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.348
H-Index - 233
eISSN - 1520-510X
pISSN - 0020-1669
DOI - 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b02568
Subject(s) - chemistry , heterolysis , carbene , deprotonation , homolysis , bond cleavage , decarboxylation , denticity , carboxylate , medicinal chemistry , ligand (biochemistry) , iodide , copper , electron paramagnetic resonance , photochemistry , stereochemistry , crystallography , radical , catalysis , organic chemistry , crystal structure , ion , biochemistry , receptor , physics , nuclear magnetic resonance
Copper(II) complexes of type (NHC)CuX 2 (X = OAc, Cl, Br, BF 4 , and NO 3 ) bearing monodentate N -heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) were prepared by in situ decarboxylation of imidazolium carboxylates as a new synthetic methodology for Cu(II)-NHC complexes. In contrast to the classical deprotonation method, the decarboxylation protocol does not require anaerobic conditions and provides access to complexes with NHCs that are unstable as free carbenes such as N , N '-diisopropyl-imidazolylidene and N , N '-dimethyl-imidazolylidene. Spectroscopic evidence of the formation of the Cu-C NHC bond is provided by UV-vis and EPR, in particular by the 44 MHz carbene hyperfine coupling constant using a 13 C-labeled imidazolylidene ligand. A variation of the nature of the carbene N-substituents and the anions bound to the Cu(II) center is possible with this methodology. These variations strongly influence the stability of the complexes. Structural rearrangement and ligand reorganization was observed during recrystallization, which are comprised of heterolytic Cu-C NHC bond dissociation for unstable NHC ligands as well as homolytic Cu-X bond cleavage and disproportionation reactions depending on the nature of the anion X in the copper complex.
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