Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA 19104 USA
2. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry University of Texas at El Paso El Paso TX 79968 USA
3. Department of Chemistry and Pharmacy, Inorganic Chemistry Friedrich-Alexander- Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU) 91058 Erlangen Germany
4. National High Magnetic Field Laboratory Florida State University Tallahassee, Florida 32310 USA
5. Department of Biological, Physical and Health Sciences Roosevelt University Chicago, Illinois 60605 USA
Abstract
AbstractThe nitrido‐ate complex [(PN)2Ti(N){μ2‐K(OEt2)}]2 (1) (PN−=(N‐(2‐PiPr2‐4‐methylphenyl)‐2,4,6‐Me3C6H2) reductively couples CO and isocyanides in the presence of DME or cryptand (Kryptofix222), to form rare, five‐coordinate TiII complexes having a linear cumulene motif, [K(L)][(PN)2Ti(NCE)] (E=O, L=Kryptofix222, (2); E=NAd, L=3 DME, (3); E=NtBu, L=3 DME, (4); E=NAd, L=Kryptofix222, (5)). Oxidation of 2–5 with [Fc][OTf] afforded an isostructural TiIII center containing a neutral cumulene, [(PN)2Ti(NCE)] (E=O, (6); E=NAd (7), NtBu (8)) and characterization by CW X‐band EPR spectroscopy, revealed unpaired electron to be metal centric. Moreover, 1e− reduction of 6 and 7 in the presence of Kryptofix222cleanly reformed corresponding discrete TiII complexes 2 and 5, which were further characterized by solution magnetization measurements and high‐frequency and ‐field EPR (HFEPR) spectroscopy. Furthermore, oxidation of 7 with [Fc*][B(C6F5)4] resulted in a ligand disproportionated TiIV complex having transoid carbodiimides, [(PN)2Ti(NCNAd)2] (9). Comparison of spectroscopic, structural, and computational data for the divalent, trivalent, and tetravalent systems, including their 15N enriched isotopomers demonstrate these cumulenes to decrease in order of backbonding as TiII→TiIII→TiIV and increasing order of π‐donation as TiII→TiIII→TiIV, thus displaying more covalency in TiIII species. Lastly, we show a synthetic cycle whereby complex 1 can deliver an N‐atom to CO and CNAd.