Litcius/Paper detail

Synthesis and Reduction of Heteroleptic Bis(cyclopentadienyl) Uranium(III) Complexes

Justin C. Wedal, Joseph W. Ziller, Filipp Furche, William J. Evans

2022Inorganic Chemistry22 citationsDOI

Abstract

Heteroleptic U(III) complexes supported by bis(cyclopentadienyl) frameworks have been synthesized to examine their suitability as precursors to U(II) complexes. The newly synthesized (C5Me5)2U(OC6H2tBu2-2,6-Me-4), (C5Me5)2U(OC6H2Ad2-2,6-tBu-4) (Ad = 1-adamantyl), (C5Me5)2U(C5H5), and (C5Me5)2U(C5Me4H) are compared with (C5Me5)2U[N(SiMe3)2], (C5Me5)2U[CH(SiMe3)2], and (C5Me5)U[N(SiMe3)2]2. An improved synthesis of (C5Me5)2U(μ-Ph)2BPh2 was developed, which was used to synthesize (C5Me5)2U(C5Me4H). Since the X-ray crystal structure of (C5Me5)2U(OC6H2tBu2-2,6-Me-4) contained two very different molecules in the asymmetric unit with 115.7(5)° and 166.0(5)° U–O–Cipso angles, the (C5Me4H)2U(OC6H2tBu2-2,6-Me-4) and (C5Me5)2Ce(OC6H2tBu2-2,6-Me-4) analogues were synthesized and characterized by X-ray diffraction for comparison. Electrochemical studies in THF with a 100 mM [nBu4N][BPh4] supporting electrolyte showed U(IV)/U(III) and U(III)/U(II) redox couples for all the heteroleptic complexes except (C5Me5)2U(C5H5). Chemical reduction of all heteroleptic compounds formed dark blue solutions characteristic of U(II) when reacted with KC8 at −78 °C, but none formed isolable U(II) complexes. The targeted U(II) complexes, [(C5Me5)2U(OC6H2tBu2-2,6-Me-4)]1–, {(C5Me5)2U[CH(SiMe3)2]}1–, [(C5Me5)2U(C5H5)]1–, and [(C5Me5)2U(C5Me4H)]1–, were analyzed by density functional theory, and a 5f36d1 electron configuration was found to be the ground state in each case.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryCyclopentadienyl complexRedoxMoleculeCrystal structureMetalloceneElectrochemistryCrystallographyUraniumStereochemistryMedicinal chemistryInorganic chemistryCatalysisOrganic chemistryPhysical chemistryPolymerizationMetallurgyElectrodeMaterials sciencePolymerRadioactive element chemistry and processingOrganometallic Complex Synthesis and CatalysisCoordination Chemistry and Organometallics