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Cationic Cycloheptatrienyl Cyclopentadienyl Manganese Sandwich Complexes: Tromancenium Explored with High-Power LED Photosynthesis

In this contribution, we revisit the neglected and forgotten cationic, air-stable, 18-valence electron, heteroleptic sandwich complex (cycloheptatrienyl)­(cyclopentadienyl)­manganese, which was reported independently by Fischer and by Pauson about 50 years ago. Using advanced high-power LED photoche...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Organometallics 2021-08, Vol.40 (15), p.2736-2749
Main Authors: Basse, Reinhard, Vanicek, Stefan, Höfer, Thomas, Kopacka, Holger, Wurst, Klaus, Müller, Thomas, Schwartz, Heidi A, Olthof, Selina, Casper, Larissa A, Nau, Moritz, Winter, Rainer F, Podewitz, Maren, Bildstein, Benno
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:In this contribution, we revisit the neglected and forgotten cationic, air-stable, 18-valence electron, heteroleptic sandwich complex (cycloheptatrienyl)­(cyclopentadienyl)­manganese, which was reported independently by Fischer and by Pauson about 50 years ago. Using advanced high-power LED photochemical synthesis, an expedient rapid access to the parent complex and to functionalized derivatives with alkyl, carboxymethyl, bromo, and amino substituents was developed. A thorough study of these “tromancenium” salts by a range of spectroscopic techniques (1H/13C/55Mn-NMR, IR, UV–vis, HRMS, XRD, XPS, EPR), cyclic voltammetry (CV), and quantum chemical calculations (DFT) shows that these manganese sandwich complexes are unique metallocenes with quite different chemical and physical properties in comparison to those of isoelectronic cobaltocenium salts or (cycloheptatrienyl)­(cyclopentadienyl) sandwich complexes of the early transition metals. Electrochemically, all tromancenium ions undergo a chemically partially reversible oxidation and a chemically irreversible reduction at half-wave or peak potentials that respond to the substituents at the Cp deck. As exemplarily shown for the parent tromancenium ion, the product generated during the irreversible reduction process reverts at least partially to the starting material upon reoxidation. Quantum-chemical calculations of the parent tromancenium salt indicate that metal–ligand bonding is distinctly weaker for the cycloheptatrienyl ligand in comparison to that of the cyclopentadienyl ligand. Both the HOMO and the LUMO are metal and cycloheptatrienyl-ligand centered, indicating that chemical reactions will occur either metal-based or at the seven-membered ring, but not on the cyclopentadienyl ligand.
ISSN:0276-7333
1520-6041
DOI:10.1021/acs.organomet.1c00376