Loading…

Structural Systematics for o-C6H4XY Ligands with X,Y= O, NH, and S Donor Atoms. o-Iminoquinone and o-Iminothioquinone Complexes of Ruthenium and Osmium

The structural features of quinone ligands are diagnostic of charge. The o-benzoquinone, radical semiquinonate, and catecholate electronic forms have C−O bond lengths and a pattern of ring C−C bond lengths that point to a specific mode of coordination. This correlation between ligand charge and stru...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Inorganic chemistry 2002-11, Vol.41 (22), p.5810-5816
Main Authors: Bhattacharya, Samaresh, Gupta, Parna, Basuli, Falguni, Pierpont, Cortlandt G
Format: Article
Language:English
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:The structural features of quinone ligands are diagnostic of charge. The o-benzoquinone, radical semiquinonate, and catecholate electronic forms have C−O bond lengths and a pattern of ring C−C bond lengths that point to a specific mode of coordination. This correlation between ligand charge and structure has been extended to iminoquinone and iminothioquinone ligands, giving a charge-localized view of electronic structure for complexes of redox-active metal ions. The radical semiquinonate form of these ligands has been found to be a surprisingly common mode of coordination; however, the paramagnetic character of the radical ligand is often obscured in complexes containing paramagnetic metal ions. In this report, diamagnetic iminosemiquinonate (isq) and iminothiosemiquinonate (itsq) complexes of ls-d5 Ru(III) with related complexes of osmium are reported. With osmium, the Os(IV)−amidophenolate (ap) redox isomer is formed. Electrochemical and spectral properties are described for Ru(PPh3)2(isq)Cl2, Ru(PPh3)2(itsq)Cl2, Os(PPh3)2(ap)Br2, Os(PPh3)2(atp)Br2, and Os(PPh3)2(ap)H2. Crystallographic characterization of Ru(PPh3)2(isq)Cl2, Ru(PPh3)2(itsq)Cl2, and Os(PPh3)2(ap)H2 was used to assign charge distributions.
ISSN:0020-1669
1520-510X
DOI:10.1021/ic025766+