RESUMO
The reactions of anionic aluminium or gallium nucleophiles {K[E(NON)]}2 (E = Al, 1; Ga, 2; NON = 4,5-bis(2,6-diisopropylanilido)-2,7-ditert-butyl-9,9-dimethylxanthene) with beryllocene (BeCp2) led to the displacement of one cyclopentadienyl ligand at beryllium and the formation of compounds containing Be-Al or Be-Ga bonds (NON)EBeCp (E = Al, 3; Ga, 4). The Be-Al bond in the beryllium-aluminyl complex [2.310(4) Å] is much shorter than that found in the small number of previous examples [2.368(2) to 2.432(6) Å], and quantum chemical calculations suggest the existence of a non-nuclear attractor (NNA) for the Be-Al interaction. This represents the first example of a NNA for a heteroatomic interaction in an isolated molecular complex. As a result of this unusual electronic structure and the similarity in the Pauling electronegativities of beryllium and aluminium, the charge at the beryllium center (+1.39) in 3 is calculated to be less positive than that of the aluminium center (+1.88). This calculated charge distribution suggests the possibility for nucleophilic behavior at beryllium and correlates with the observed reactivity of the beryllium-aluminyl complex with N,N'-diisopropylcarbodiimideâthe electrophilic carbon center of the carbodiimide undergoes nucleophilic attack by beryllium, thereby yielding a beryllium-diaminocarbene complex.
RESUMO
The reaction of homoleptic beryllium halide with diphenyl beryllium complexes leads to the clean formation of heteroleptic beryllium Grignard compounds [(L)1-2 BePhX]1-2 (X=Cl, Br, I; L=C-, N-, O-donor ligand). The influence of ligands and solvent on these compounds, their formation and exchange equilibria in solution were investigated, together with the factors determining the complex constitution.
RESUMO
Anionic lithium-containing species were predicted to impact ionic liquid-based electrochemical applications but have hitherto never been isolated from ionic liquid systems. Here, we report the first representatives of this class of compounds, ino-chloridolithates, comprising [LiCl2]- and [Li2Cl3]- polyanions from ionothermal reactions. Such compounds are obtained at moderate temperatures with imidazolium-based ionic liquids and LiCl. The addition of an auxiliary ammonium salt enhances the lattice energy to yield an ammonium lithate in good yields, which enables extensive investigations including solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance, infrared, and Raman spectroscopy. The structural motifs of ino-lithates are related to ino-silicates, as 1D-extended anionic substructures are formed. Despite this analogy, according to density functional theory calculations with periodic boundary conditions, no evidence of covalent bonding in the anionic moieties is found-indicating packing effects to be the main cause for the formation. Based on an in-depth analysis of the different synthetic parameters, this class of compounds is discussed as an intermediate in ionic liquid applications and could serve as a model system for electrochemical lithium-based systems.
RESUMO
The reactivity of free 1,3-diisopropyl-4,5-dimethylimidazol-2-ylidene (MeIPr) and 1,3-bis(2,6-diisopropylphenyl)imidazol-2-ylidene (IDipp) in dichloromethane was investigated. MeIPr reacts relatively slowly and selectively with the solvent under the formation of imidazolium salt [MeIPrH]Cl, which was characterised through NMR and IR spectroscopy as well as single crystal X-ray diffraction. Through deuterium labelling experiments the reaction rate was determined. In contrast IDipp reacts unselectively to various imidazolium salts. Due to the slow decomposition rates of MeIPr and IDipp in CH2Cl2, reactions of the free carbenes with BeBr2 to [(MeIPr)BeBr2], [(MeIPr)2BeBr2] and [(IDipp)BeBr2] can be performed.