TY - JOUR
T1 - Carbenes as pure donor ligands
T2 - Theoretical study of beryllium-carbene complexes
AU - Fröhlich, Nikolaus
AU - Pidun, Ulrich
AU - Stahl, Martin
AU - Frenking, Gernot
PY - 1997/2/4
Y1 - 1997/2/4
N2 - Quantum chemical ab initio calculations at the MP2/6-31G(d) level of theory are reported for the beryllium-carbene complexes Be(CX2)n2+ (X = H, F; n = 1-4), ClBe(CX2)n+ (X = H, F; n = 1-3), and Cl2Be(CX2)n (X = H, F; n = 1, 2). The complex ClBe(C(NH2)2)3+ has also been calculated. Where feasible, the bond energies of some molecules are reported at MP4/ 6-311G(d)//MP2/6-31G(d). Analysis of the bonding situation with the help of the natural bond orbital method shows that the carbene ligands are pure donors in the complexes. The dications Be(CX2)n2+ (X = H, F; n = 1-4) have strong Be2+-C donor-acceptor bonds. The bond strengths decrease clearly when the number of ligands increases from n = 1 to 4. The CH2 complexes have stronger Be-C bonds than the CF2 complexes. Yet, the CH2 complexes are chemically less stable than the CF2 complexes for kinetic reasons. The carbon p(π) orbital of methylene stays nearly empty in the complexes, which makes them prone to nucleophilic attack. All theoretical evidence indicates that the dominant factor which determines the chemical stability of carbenes and carbene complexes is the population of the carbon p(π) orbital. The chemical instability of the methylene complexes becomes obvious by the geometry optimizations of ClBe(CH2)2+, ClBe(CH2)3+, Cl2Be(CH2), and Cl2Be(CH2)2, which lead to rearranged structures as energy minimum forms. The C-H bonds and particularly the C-F bonds of the ligands are shorter than in free CH2 and CF2. The carbon atom of CF2 becomes electronically stabilized in the complexes via p(π) donation from fluorine. This finding suggests that carbene ligands, which are unstable as free molecules, may become sufficiently stabilized to be isolated even in complexes without metal → carbene back-donation.
AB - Quantum chemical ab initio calculations at the MP2/6-31G(d) level of theory are reported for the beryllium-carbene complexes Be(CX2)n2+ (X = H, F; n = 1-4), ClBe(CX2)n+ (X = H, F; n = 1-3), and Cl2Be(CX2)n (X = H, F; n = 1, 2). The complex ClBe(C(NH2)2)3+ has also been calculated. Where feasible, the bond energies of some molecules are reported at MP4/ 6-311G(d)//MP2/6-31G(d). Analysis of the bonding situation with the help of the natural bond orbital method shows that the carbene ligands are pure donors in the complexes. The dications Be(CX2)n2+ (X = H, F; n = 1-4) have strong Be2+-C donor-acceptor bonds. The bond strengths decrease clearly when the number of ligands increases from n = 1 to 4. The CH2 complexes have stronger Be-C bonds than the CF2 complexes. Yet, the CH2 complexes are chemically less stable than the CF2 complexes for kinetic reasons. The carbon p(π) orbital of methylene stays nearly empty in the complexes, which makes them prone to nucleophilic attack. All theoretical evidence indicates that the dominant factor which determines the chemical stability of carbenes and carbene complexes is the population of the carbon p(π) orbital. The chemical instability of the methylene complexes becomes obvious by the geometry optimizations of ClBe(CH2)2+, ClBe(CH2)3+, Cl2Be(CH2), and Cl2Be(CH2)2, which lead to rearranged structures as energy minimum forms. The C-H bonds and particularly the C-F bonds of the ligands are shorter than in free CH2 and CF2. The carbon atom of CF2 becomes electronically stabilized in the complexes via p(π) donation from fluorine. This finding suggests that carbene ligands, which are unstable as free molecules, may become sufficiently stabilized to be isolated even in complexes without metal → carbene back-donation.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0037892015&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/om960752v
DO - 10.1021/om960752v
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:0037892015
SN - 0276-7333
VL - 16
SP - 442
EP - 448
JO - Organometallics
JF - Organometallics
IS - 3
ER -