Alkali Metal Ions Dictate the Structure and Reactivity of an Iron(II) Imido Complex.
Yafei GaoMaren PinkJeremy M SmithPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
The presence of redox innocent metal ions has been proposed to modulate the reactivity of metal ligand multiple bonds; however, insight from structure/function relationships is limited. Here, alkali metal reduction of the Fe(III) imido complex [Ph 2 B( t BuIm) 2 Fe═NDipp] ( 1 ) provides the series of structurally characterized Fe(II) imido complexes [Ph 2 B( t BuIm) 2 Fe═NDippLi(THF) 2 ] ( 2 ), [Ph 2 B( t BuIm) 2 Fe═NDippNa(THF) 3 ] ( 3 ), and [Ph 2 B( t BuIm) 2 Fe═NDippK] 2 ( 4 ), in which the alkali metal cations coordinate the imido ligand. Structural investigations demonstrate that the alkali metal ions modestly lengthen the Fe═N bond distance from that in the charge separated complex [Ph 2 B( t BuIm) 2 Fe═NDipp][K(18-C-6)THF 2 ] ( 5 ), with the longest bond observed for the smallest alkali metal ion. In contrast to 5 , the imido ligands in 2 - 4 can be protonated and alkylated to afford Fe(II) amido complexes. Combined experimental and computational studies reveal that the alkali metal polarizes the Fe═N bond, and the basicity of imido ligand increases according to 5 < 4 ≈ 3 < 2 . The basicity of the imido ligands influences the relative rates of reaction with 1,4-cyclohexadiene, specifically by gating access to complex 5 , which is the species that is active for HAT. All complexes 2 - 4 react with benzophenone form metastable Fe(II) intermediates that subsequently eliminate the metathesis product Ph 2 C═NDipp, with relative rates dependent on the alkali metal ion. By contrast, the same reaction with 5 does not lead to the formation of Ph 2 C═NDipp. These results demonstrate that the coordination of alkali metal ions dictate both the structure and reactivity of the imido ligand and moreover can direct the reactivity of reaction intermediates.