Insertion of a Transient Tin Nitride into Carbon-Carbon and Boron-Carbon Bonds.
Shuai WangLizhi TaoTroy A StichMarilyn M OlmsteadR David BrittPhilip P PowerPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2017)
A simple exchange reaction between [AriPr4Sn(μ-Cl)]2 (1) and sodium azide afforded the doubly bridged Sn(II) azide, [AriPr4Sn(μ-N3)]2 (2) (AriPr4 = C6H3-2,6(C6H3-2,6-iPr2)2) in 85% yield. Photolysis of a diethyl ether solution of 2 for ca. 16 h yielded an azepinyl-substituted insertion product, [C6H3-2-(C6H3-2,6-iPr2)-6-(C6H3N-3,7-iPr2)Sn]2 (3). The reaction of the Lewis acid, B(C6F5)3 (BCF), or the Lewis base, pyridine, with 2 dissociates the dimer to afford the corresponding complexed monomeric Sn(II) azide, AriPr4SnN3BCF (4) in which BCF coordinates the α-nitrogen, or AriPr4Sn(pyridine)N3 (6) in which pyridine coordinates to the tin atom. Photolysis of 4 in diethyl ether for 12 h results in the insertion of the α-nitrogen of the azide group into one of the B-C bonds of the BCF acceptor to yield the tin(II) amide, AriPr4SnN(C6F5)B(C6F5)2 (5). In contrast, photolysis of 6 for over 36 h afforded no apparent reaction. A highly reactive Sn nitride intermediate, AriPr4Sn≡N, is proposed as part of the mechanistic pathway for the formation of 3 and 5 as a result of trapping the tin-centered radical isomers. This was effected by immediate freezing the samples of 2 or 4 after ca. 30 min of UV photolysis and recording their electron paramagnetic resonance spectra. These exhibited a rhombic g tensor of [g1, g2, g3] = [2.029, 1.978, 1.933]. This radical intermediate could be related to the valence isomers of the nitride [-SnIV≡N] intermediate, in isomeric equilibrium with the nitrene [-SnII-N] and nitridyl [-SnIII═N·] forms, but with the spin density on the nitrogen being quenched, possibly by the H atom abstraction to form an S = 1/2 species of formula -Sn·═N(H).