화학공학소재연구정보센터
Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.57, No.16, 9696-9707, 2018
When Do Strongly Coupled Diradicals Show Strongly Coupled Reactivity? Thermodynamics and Kinetics of Hydrogen Atom Transfer Reactions of Palladium and Platinum Bis(iminosemiquinone) Complexes
The 2,2'-biphenylene-bridged bis(iminosemiquinone) complexes ((t)BuClip)M [(t)BuClipH(4) = 4,4'-di-tert-butyl-N,N'-bis(3,5-di-tert-butyl-2-hydroxyphenyl)-2,2'-diaminobiphenyl; M = Pd, Pt] can be reduced to the bis(aminophenoxide) complexes ((t)BuClipH(2))M by reaction with hydrazobenzene (M = Pd) or by catalytic hydrogenation (M = Pt). The palladium complex with one aminophenoxide ligand and one iminosemiquinone ligand, ((t)BuClipH)Pd, is generated by comproportionation of ((t)BuClip)Pd with ((t)BuClipH(2))Pd in a process that is both slow (0.06 M-1 s(-1) in toluene at 23 degrees C) and only modestly favorable (K-com = 1.9 in CDCl3), indicating that both N-H bonds have essentially the same bond strength. The mono(iminoquinone) complex ((t)BuClipH)Pt has not been observed, indicating that the platinum analogue shows no tendency to comproportionate (K-com < 0.1). The average bond dissociation free energies (BDFE) of the complexes have been established by equilibration with suitably substituted hydrazobenzenes, and the palladium bis(iminosemiquinone) is markedly more oxidizing than the platinum compound, with hydrogen transfer from ((t)BuClipH(2))Pt to ((t)BuClip)Pd occurring with Delta G degrees = -8.9 kcal mol(-1). The palladium complex ((t)BuClipH(2))Pd reacts with nitroxyl radicals in two observable steps, with the first hydrogen transfer taking place slightly faster than the second. In the platinum analogue, the first hydrogen transfer is much slower than the second, presumably because the N-H bond in the monoradical complex ((t)BuClipH)Pt is unusually weak. Using driving force-rate correlations, it is estimated that this bond has a BDFE of 55.1 kcal mol(-1), which is 7.1 kcal mol(-1) weaker than that of the first N-H bond in ((t)BuClipH(2))Pt. The two radical centers in the platinum, but not the palladium, complex thus act in concert with each other and display a strong thermodynamic bias toward two-electron reactivity. The greater thermodynamic and kinetic coupling in the platinum complex is attributed to the stronger metal-ligand pi interactions in this compound.