Chapter 13 Lecture 1 Organometallic Ligands and Bonding

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Organometallic MT Complexes
Advertisements

Metal Complexes -- Chapter 24
CO  Carbonyl:  -donor, strong  -acceptor.  Terminal ( cm -1 ),  2 -bridging ( cm -1 ) or  3 -bridging ( cm -1 ). For free.
Organometallic Chemistry. 1
Ch 10 Lecture 3 Angular Overlap
Chemistry and “Magic Numbers” The Octet Rule: Period 2 nonmetallic elements tend to form compounds resulting in eight electrons around the central atom.
Ligand Substitution Rxns
Lecture 21. Complexes of π–bonded and aromatic ligands
Organometallic Compounds
Organometallic Chemistry. organometallics incorporating carbon-metal bonds have been known and studied for nearly 200 years their unique properties have.
Coordination Chemistry Bonding in transition-metal complexes.
Prentice-Hall © 2002 Complex Ions and Coordination Compounds.
Placing electrons in d orbitals (strong vs weak field)
Coordination Chemistry Bonding in transition-metal complexes.
Metal-ligand  interactions in an octahedral environment Six ligand orbitals of  symmetry approaching the metal ion along the x,y,z axes We can build.
Elements of organometallic chemistry. Complexes containing M-C bonds Complexes with  -acceptor ligands Chemistry of lower oxidation states very important.
How does CFT measure up? I. Colours of Transition Metal Complexes
Organometallic Chemistry an overview of structures and reactions Peter H.M. Budzelaar.
Big-picture perspective: The interactions of the d orbitals with their surrounding chemical environment (ligands) influences their energy levels, and this.
Transition Metal Complex Bonding and Spectroscopy Review
Lecture 26 MO’s of Coordination Compounds MLx (x = 4,6) 1) Octahedral complexes with M-L s-bonds only Consider an example of an octahedral complex.
Lecture 20. An introduction to organometallic chemistry
Alkenes/Alkynes Alkenes are typically relatively weakly coordinating ligands. They are also extremely important substrates for catalytic reactions.
Ch 10 Lecture 2 Ligand Field Theory
Coordination Chemistry:
Bonding in coordination compounds
Complexes.
Coordination Compounds
Chemistry.
Ligands and electron counting in organometallic chemistry
Schedule Lecture 4: Re-cap Lecture 5:  -Acceptor Ligands and Biology CO, N 2 and O 2 complexes Lecture 6: M-M bonding Multiple bonds and metal clusters.
Slide 2/26 Schedule Lecture 1: Electronic absorption spectroscopy Jahn-Teller effect and the spectra of d 1, d 4, d 6 and d 9 ions Lecture 2: Interpreting.
Infrared Photodissociation Spectroscopy of Silicon Carbonyl Cations
Chapter 15 Main Group/Organometallic Parallels (pp )
Metal Carbonyl Compounds
Transition Metals and Coordination Compounds. Transition Metals The transition metals are the d-block elements. The Inner Transitions metals are the lanthanides.
CHEM 522 Chapter 01 Introduction. Transition Metal Organometallic Chemistry Organic versus inorganic chemistry Transition metals –Oxidation state –d orbitals.
Crystal Field Theory Molecular Orbital Theory: Donor- Acceptor Interactions.
Co-ordination Chemistry Theories of Bonding in Co-ordination compound. 1. Valence Bond Theory 2. Crystal Field Theory 3. Molecular Orbital Theory.
Lecture 7: M-M bonds d-bonds and bonding in metal clusters
Inorganic Chemistry (2)
Chapter 13 Lecture 2 More Ligand Types
Ch 10 Lecture 1 Bonding Basics I.Evidence of Electronic Structure A.What is Electronic Structure? 1)Electronic Structure = what orbitals electrons reside.
Sub-Topics Introduction to Transition Metals
16 Reactions of inorganic compounds in aqueous solution 16.1 Lewis acids and bases 16.2 Ligand substitution reactions 16.3 Summary: Acid-Base and substitution.
Lecture 14 — Organometallic Ligands and Bonding
Transition-Metal Complexes are extremely colorful!
INORGANIC CHEMISTRY CHEMISTRY 340. MAIN THEMES OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY Periodic Properties and Periodic Trends Point Groups and Symmetry The 18 electron.
Coordination Chemistry: Bonding Theories
COORDINATION COMPOUNDS
Coordination Chemistry Bonding in transition-metal complexes
Chemistry of Coordination Compounds
Chemistry of Coordination Compounds
Chem. 1B – 11/15 Lecture.
Ligand Field Theory: σ Bonding
Electron Counting Methods Electron Counts for [MXaLb]c+
Chem 340 Alex Kattermann & Fernanda Lois
Chapter 13 Organometallic Chemistry Structure and Bonding
Bonding in Transition Metal Compounds
Bonding in Transition Metal Compounds
Bonding in Transition Metal Compounds
Chapter 13 Organometallic Chemistry Structure and Bonding
The Synthesis, Purification, and Characterization of Ferrocene
Physical Chemistry Chapter V Polyatomic Molecular Structure 2019/4/10
Invisible Ink 2[Co(H2O)6]Cl2(s) Co[CoCl4](s) + 12 H2O
Electron Counting Examples
Metal Carbonyls.
Chemistry and “Magic Numbers”
PREPARATION AND PROPERTIES OF METALLIC CARBONYLS
Chapter 13 Lecture 1 Organometallic Ligands and Bonding
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 13 Lecture 1 Organometallic Ligands and Bonding Organometallic Basics An Organometallic Complex contains at least one M—C bond Includes ligands: CO, NO, N2, PR3, H2 Doesn’t include CN- (classical coordination chemistry ligand) Both s and p bonding between M and C occur History Zeise’s Salt synthesized in 1827 = K[Pt(C2H4)Cl3] • H2O Confirmed to have H2C=CH2 as a ligand in 1868 Structure not fully known until 1975 Ni(CO)4 synthesized in 1890 Grignard Reagents (XMgR) synthesized about 1900 Accidentally produced while trying to make other compounds Utility to Organic Synthesis recognized early on

4) Ferrocene synthesized in 1951 a) Modern Organometallic Chemistry begins with this discovery b) Many new ligands and reactions produced ever since 5) Organometallic Chemistry has really been around for millions of years a) Naturally occurring Cobalimins contain Co—C bonds b) Vitamin B12

Ligands and Nomenclature Common Organic Ligands Binding Modes Bridging is possible with organometallic ligands

Different numbers of atoms of the organometallic ligand may be involved in bond and is called the “Hapticity” of the ligand The 18-electron Rule Counting Electrons The octet rule governs organic and simple ionic compounds: s + 3p orbital The 18-electron rule governs organometallics (with many exceptions) s + 3p + 3d orbitals Donor ligands provide the electrons other than the d-electrons

3) The “Donor Pair” method of electron counting (Method A in your book) a) Common organometallic ligands are assigned an electron count and charge b) The charge on ligands helps determine d-electron count of metal c) Add up all electrons from Metal d orbitals and ligands to find total e- count (isonitrile or isocyanide) (oxo, sulfido) (nitrido)

Examples of Electron Counting Cr(CO)6 Total charge on ligands = 0, so charge on Cr = 0, so Cr = d6 6 CO ligands x 2 electrons each = 12 electrons Total of 18 electrons (h5-C5H5)Fe(CO)2Cl Total charge on ligands = 2-, so Fe2+ = d6 (h5-C5H5- = 6) + (2CO x 2 = 4) + (Cl- = 2) = 12 electrons Charged complex: [Mn(CO)6]+ Total ligand charge = 0, so Mn+ = d6 12 electrons from 6 CO ligands gives a total of 18 electrons M—M Bond: (CO)5Mn—Mn(CO)5 Each bond between metals counts 1 electron per metal: Mn—Mn = 1 e- Total ligand charge = 0, so Mn0 = d7 5 CO ligands per metal = 10 electrons for a total of 18 electrons per Mn

Justification for and exceptions to the 18-electron Rule MO Theory predicts that 18 electrons fill bonding orbitals This number is more stable than more (filling antibonding orbitals) or less Do

When is the 18-electron rule most valid? a) With octahedral complexes of large Do. Ligands are good s-donors and good p-acceptors (CO) Exceptions to the 18-electron rule are common Weak field ligands with small Do make filling eg* possible ( > 18e-) p-donor ligands can make t2g antibonding ( < 18 e-)

5). Square Planar Complexes (d8) follow a 16-electron rule 5) Square Planar Complexes (d8) follow a 16-electron rule. 18 electrons would destabilized the complexes by filling the high energy dx2-y2 orbital.

Carbonyl Complexes (CO) Bonding Review of CO Molecular Orbitals HOMO resides mostly on C = s-donation LUMO resides mostly on C = p-acceptance Reinforce each other and provide strong bonding Bonding of CO to a Metal

Characteristics of CO complexes Infrared Spectroscopy Free CO stretch n = 2143 cm-1 Cr(CO)6 CO stretch n = 2000 cm-1 because p-back donation from metal weakens the CO bond by adding e- to antibonding p* orbital Negative charge on complex further weakens CO bond: [V(CO)6]- n = 1858 cm-1 [Mn(CO)6]+ n = 2095 cm-1 d) Bridging CO further weakened by extra p-back donation (e- count = 1/M) X-Ray Crystallography Free CO bond length = 112.8 pm M—CO carbonyl bond length = 115 pm

Synthesis and Reactions of CO Complexes Carbonyl complexes of most metals exist. Most obey the 18-electron rule Bridging decreases down the periodic table as d-orbitals become larger. Synthesis Direct reaction: Ni + 4 CO Ni(CO)4 Toxic, used to purify Ni Reductive Carbonylation: CrCl3 + CO + Al Cr(CO)6 + AlCl3 Thermal/Photochemical: 2 Fe(CO)5 + hn Fe2(CO)9 + CO Reactions: useful for the synthesis of other compounds by substitution of CO Cr(CO)6 + PPh3 Cr(CO)5(PPh3) + CO Re(CO)5Br + en Re(CO)3(en)Br + 2 CO

Ligands Similar to CO CN- (cyanide) is isolectric to CO Stronger s-donor and slightly weaker p-acceptor than CO More stable with M+ due to –1 charge than M0 (which favors CO) Considered a classical ligand rather than organometallic for this reason NN (dinitrogen) is isoelectric to CO Weaker s-donor and weaker p-acceptor than CO, so doesn’t bind well Very important in Nitrogen Fixation, so much research centers on complexes NO+ (nitrosyl) is isoelectric to CO Similar to CO in s-donor and p-acceptor properties Electron counting scheme considers linear NO complexes as 2 e- NO+ Electron counting scheme considers bent NO complexes as 2 e- NO-

Hydride and Dihydrogen Complexes Hydride Complexes M—H bonding is s-donation only from H- (2 electron, -1 charge) Synthesis Reaction with H2: Co2(CO)8 + H2 2 HCo(CO)4 Reduction of carbonyl complex followed by addition of H+ Co2(CO)8 + 2 Na 2 Na[Co(CO)4] 2 Na[Co(CO)4] + H+ HCo(CO)4 Dihydrogen Complexes First Complex characterized in 1984 Mo(CO)3(PR3)(H2) Bonding s-donation from H2 s molecular orbital p-acceptance from H2 s* molecular orbital H—H bond is weaker and longer than free H2 (82-90 pm vs. 74 pm) Electron-rich metals can completely rupture the H2 bond by p-back donation Other good p-acceptor ligands on the metal helps stabilize the H2—M complex