RESUMEN
The potential of 15-crown-5 ethers to link large cations, such as potassium, is limited by the quasi-parallel arrangement of two oxygen donor moieties upon appropriate orientation of the corresponding ether-ring-containing molecules. Substrates bearing the two crown ethers that are capable of achieving such coordination are hitherto unknown. The synthesis and isolation of a tailor-made dinuclear palladacycle bearing 15-crown-5 ether rings on the metallated phenyls offers such a possibility, providing the adequate environment for the formation of the sandwiched [K(metallacycle-15-crown-5)2 ] moiety. This synthetic strategy also culminates in the isolation of the first palladacycle able to entrap a potassium cation through bonding to two 15-crown-5 ether rings in a single molecule.
RESUMEN
This account reports the synthesis and structural characterization of the first cyclometallated platinum(II) complex that coordinates a potassium cation in a sandwich arrangement via two 15-crown-5 ether rings within the same molecule. The cooperation of the two small crown ether moieties allows the entrapment of the non-ideal potassium ion. The reaction of the parent thiosemicarbazone ligand 3,4-(C8H16O5)C6H3C(Me)=NN-(H)C(=S)NHMe, 1, containing the crown ether ring, with K2[PtCl4], or alternatively with PtCl2(DMSO)2, and subsequent treatment with the diphosphanes Ph2PCH2PPh2 (dppm) and Ph2PC(=CH2)PPh2 (vdpp) produced the double nuclear platinacycles 3a, 3b, and 4, probably via formation of the 2a and 2b intermediates. Complex 3a with the K+ cation in a sandwich coordination was slightly mixed with 3b lacking any K+. Alternatively, reaction of 1 with K2[PtCl4] or with PtCl2(DMSO)2 followed by the diphosphane Ph2PC(=CH2)PPh2 (vdpp) only gave the dinuclear phosphane-bridged compound 4; this highlights the importance of choosing the right diphosphane ligand. Density functional theory calculations (B3LYP-D3/LANL2DZ-ECP-6.311++G**) revealed similar affinities for both dppm and vdpp derivatives to coordinate potassium cations. Crystal structure analysis was performed for compounds 3a and 4.