In organometallic chemistry, a transition metal indenyl complex is a coordination compound that contains one or more indenyl ligands. The indenyl ligand is formally the anion derived from deprotonation of indene. The η5-indenyl ligand is related to the η5cyclopentadienyl anion (Cp), thus indenyl analogues of many cyclopentadienyl complexes are known. Indenyl ligands lack the 5-fold symmetry of Cp, so they exhibit more complicated geometries. Furthermore, some indenyl complexes also exist with only η3-bonding mode. The η5- and η3-bonding modes sometimes interconvert.[1]

Preparation and structure

Indene is deprotonated by butyl lithium and related reagents to give the equivalent of the indenyl anion:[2]

C9H8 + BuLi → LiC9H7 + BuH

The resulting lithium indenide can be used to prepare indenyl complexes by salt metathesis reactions of metal halides.[3] When the metal halide is easily reduced, the trimethylstannylindenyl can be used as a source of indenyl anion:

Me3SnC9H7 + TiCl4 → Me3SnCl + C9H7TiCl3
Metallocene dichloride 1, containing two Cp ligands (C2v symmetry), a related complex bis(indenyl) complex 2 (C2 symmetry), and a mixed Cp-fluorenyl complex 3 (Cs symmetry). Such compounds are precursors to Ziegler–Natta catalysts.

The M-C distances in indenyl complexes are comparable to those in cyclopentadienyl complexes. For the metallocenes M(Ind)2, ring slipping is evident for the case of M = Co and especially Ni, but not for M = Fe.[4] A number of chelating or ansa-bis(indenyl complexes are known, such as those derived from 2,2'-bis(2-indenyl) biphenyl

Indenyl effect

The indenyl effect refers to an explanation for the enhanced rates of substitution exhibited by η5-indenyl complexes vs the related η5-cyclopentadienyl complexes.[6][7][8][9][10][11]

Associative substitution occurs by the addition of a ligand to a metal complex followed by dissociation of an original ligand. Associative pathways are not typically seen in 18-electron complexes due to the requisite intermediates having more than 18 electrons associated with the metal atom. 18 electron indenyl complexes; however, have been shown to undergo substitution via associative pathways quite readily. This is attributed to the relative ease of η5 to η3 rearrangement due to stabilization by the arene. This stabilization is responsible for substitution rate enhancements of about 108 for the substitution of indenyl complexes compared to the corresponding cyclopentadienyl complex.

Kinetic data support two proposed mechanisms for associative ligand substitution. The first mechanism, proposed by Hart-Davis and Mawby, is a concerted attack by the nucleophile and η5 to η3 transition followed by loss of a ligand and a η3 to η5 transition.

One mechanism proposed for substitution of (indenyl)M(CO)2 by triphenylphosphine.
One mechanism proposed for substitution of (indenyl)M(CO)2 by triphenylphosphine.

In a mechanism proposed by Basolo, η5 and η3 isomers exist in rapid chemical equilibrium. The rate-limiting step occurs with the attack of the nucleophile on a η3 isomer. The nature of the substituents of the allyl group can strongly affect the kinetics and regiochemistry of the nucleophilic attack.[12]

η5 to η3 rearrangement in other ligands

Indenyl like effects are also observed in a number of non indenyl substituted metal complexes. In fluorenyl complexes, associative substitution is enhanced even further than indenyl compounds. The substitution rate of Mn(η5-C13H9)(CO)3 is about 60 times faster than that of Mn(η5-C9H7)(CO)3

Mechanism for ligand substitution in Fluorenyl substituted metals.
Mechanism for ligand substitution in Fluorenyl substituted metals.

Veiros conducted a study comparing the rate of substitution on [(η5-X)Mn(CO)3] where X is cyclopentadienyl, indenyl, fluorenyl, cyclohexadienyl, and 1-hydronaphthalene. Unsurprisingly, it was found that the ease of η5 to η3 haptotropic shift correlated to the strength of the Mn-X bond.[10]

General trend for haptotropic rearrangement assisted ligand substitution.
General trend for haptotropic rearrangement assisted ligand substitution.

History

The indenyl analogues of ferrocene, which is orange, and cobaltocenium cation were first reported by Pauson and Wilkinson.[3] The cobalt derivative is a poorer reductant than cobaltocene.

The indenyl effect was discovered by Hart-Davis and Mawby in 1969 through studies on the conversion of (η5-C9H7)Mo(CO)3CH3 to the phosphine-substituted acetyl complex, which follows bimolecular kinetics. This rate law was attributed to the haptotropic rearrangement of the indenyl ligand from η5 to η3. The corresponding reaction of tributylphosphine with (η5-C5H5)Mo(CO)3CH3 was 10 x slower.[13] The term indenyl effect was coined by Fred Basolo.

Subsequent work by Hart-Davis, Mawby, and White compared CO substitution by phosphines in Mo(η5-C9H7)(CO)3X and Mo(η5-C5H5)(CO)3X (X = Cl, Br, I) and found the cyclopentadienyl compounds to substitute by an SN1 pathway and the indenyl compounds to substitute by both SN1 and SN2 pathways. Mawby and Jones later studied the rate of CO substitution with P(OEt)3 with Fe(η5-C9H7)(CO)2I and Fe(η5-C5H5)(CO)2I and found that both occur by an SN1 pathway with the indenyl substitution occurring about 575 times faster. Hydrogenation of the arene ring in the indenyl ligand resulted in CO substitution at about half the rate of the cyclopentadienyl compound.

Work in the early 1980s by Basolo found the SN2 replacement of CO in Rh(η5-C9H7)(CO)2 to be 108 times faster than in Rh(η5-C5H5)(CO)2. Shortly afterwards, Basolo tested the effect of the indene ligand on Mn(η5-C9H7)(CO)3, the cyclopentadienyl analogue of which having been shown to be inert to CO substitution. Mn(η5-C9H7)(CO)3 did undergo CO loss and was found to substitute via an SN2 mechanism.

References

  1. O'Connor, Joseph M.; Casey, Charles P. (1987). "Ring-Slippage Chemistry of Transition Metal Cyclopentadienyl and Indenyl Complexes". Chemical Reviews. 87 (2): 307–318. doi:10.1021/cr00078a002.
  2. Robert J. Morris; Scott L. Shaw; Jesse M. Jefferis; James J. Storhoff; Dean M. Goedde (1998). "Monoindenyltrichloride Complexes of Titanium(IV), Zirconium(IV), and Hafnium(IV)". Inorganic Syntheses. Vol. 32. pp. 215–221. doi:10.1002/9780470132630.ch36. ISBN 978-0-470-13263-0. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  3. 1 2 Pauson, P. L.; Wilkinson, G. (1954). "Bis-indenyl derivatives of iron and cobalt". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 76 (7): 2024–6. doi:10.1021/ja01636a098.
  4. Westcott, S. A.; Kakkar, A. K.; Stringer, G.; Taylor, N. J.; Marder, T. B. (1990). "Flexible coordination of indenyl ligands in sandwich complexes of transition metals. Molecular structures of [(η-C9R7)2M] (M = Fe, R = H, Me; M = Co, Ni, R = H): Direct measurement of the degree of slip-fold distortion as a function of d-electron count". Journal of Organometallic Chemistry. 394 (1–3): 777–794. doi:10.1016/0022-328X(90)87268-I.
  5. Atwood, J. L.; Hunter, W. E.; Hrncir, D. C.; Samuel, E.; Alt, H.; Rausch, M. D. (1975). "Molecular Structures of the Bis(.Eta.5-Indenyl)Dimethyl Derivatives of Titanium, Zirconium, and Hafnium". Inorganic Chemistry. 14 (8): 1757–1762. doi:10.1021/ic50150a003.
  6. C. White; R.J. Mawby; A.J. Hart-Davis (1970). "Reactions of tricarbonyl-π-cyclopentadienylhalomolybdenum(II) complexes with phosphorus(III) ligands: a kinetic study". Inorg. Chim. Acta. 4: 441–6. doi:10.1016/S0020-1693(00)93323-1.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. Fred Basolo (1982). "Associative substitution reactions of 18-electron transition metal organometallic complexes". Coord. Chem. Rev. 43: 7–15. doi:10.1016/S0010-8545(00)82089-5.
  8. Mark E. Rerek; Liang-Nian Ji; Fred Basolo (1983). "The indenyl ligand effect on the rate of substitution reactions of Rh(η-C9H7)(CO)2 and Mn(η-C9H7)(CO)3". J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun. (21): 1208–09. doi:10.1039/C39830001208.
  9. Mark E. Rerek; Fred Basolo (1984). "Kinetics and mechanism of substitution reactions of η5-cyclopentadienyldicarbonylrhodium(I) derivatives. Rate enhancement of associative substitution in cyclopentadienylmetal compounds". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 106 (20): 5908. doi:10.1021/ja00332a026.
  10. 1 2 Luis F. Veiros (2000). "The Role of Haptotropic Shifts in Phosphine Addition to Tricarbonylmanganese Organometallic Complexes: the Indenyl Effect Revisited". Organometallics. 19 (16): 3127–3136. doi:10.1021/om000195j.
  11. M.J. Calhorda; Romão, Carlos C.; Veiros, Luis F. (2002). "The Nature of the Indenyl Effect". Chem. Eur. J. 8 (4): 868–875. doi:10.1002/1521-3765(20020215)8:4<868::AID-CHEM868>3.0.CO;2-I. PMID 11857701.
  12. Szabó, Kálmán J. (2001). "Nature of the interaction between β-substituents and the allyl moiety in (η3-allyl)palladium complexes". Chemical Society Reviews. 30 (2): 136–143. doi:10.1039/A908934I.
  13. Hart-Davis, A.J.; Mawby, R.J. "Reactions of -indenyl complexes of transition metals. Part I. Kinetics and mechanisms of reactions of tricarbonyl--indenylmethylmolybdenum with phosphorus(III) ligands". J. Chem. Soc. A. 1969: 2403–6. doi:10.1039/J19690002403.
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