Trapping of a Highly Bent and Reduced Form of 2-Phosphaethynolate in a Mixed-Valence Diuranium-Triamidoamine Complex.
Rosie MagnallGábor BalázsErli LuFloriana TunaAshley J WoolesManfred ScheerStephen T LiddlePublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2019)
The chemistry of 2-phosphaethynolate is burgeoning, but there remains much to learn about this ligand, for example its reduction chemistry is scarce as this promotes P-C-O fragmentations or couplings. Here, we report that reduction of [U(TrenTIPS )(OCP)] (TrenTIPS =N(CH2 CH2 NSiPri 3 )3 ) with KC8 /2,2,2-cryptand gives [{U(TrenTIPS )}2 {μ-η2 (OP):η2 (CP)-OCP}][K(2,2,2-cryptand)]. The coordination mode of this trapped 2-phosphaethynolate is unique, and derives from an unprecedented highly reduced and highly bent form of this ligand with the most acute P-C-O angle in any complex to date (P-C-O ∡ ≈127°). The characterisation data support a mixed-valence diuranium(III/IV) formulation, where backbonding from uranium gives a highly reduced form of the P-C-O unit that is perhaps best described as a uranium-stabilised OCP2-. radical dianion. Quantum chemical calculations reveal that this gives unprecedented carbene character to the P-C-O unit, which engages in a weak donor-acceptor interaction with one of the uranium ions.
Keyphrases
- molecular dynamics
- liver failure
- room temperature
- high resolution
- density functional theory
- electronic health record
- molecular dynamics simulations
- mass spectrometry
- dna methylation
- hepatitis b virus
- drug induced
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- artificial intelligence
- ionic liquid
- mechanical ventilation
- water soluble