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N-Heterocyclic carbene adducts to [Cp′FeI]2: synthesis and molecular and electronic structure

Authors :
Constantin G. Daniliuc
Dirk Baabe
Peter G. Jones
Matthias Freytag
Marc D. Walter
Kristoffer Harms
Matthias Reiners
Miyuki Maekawa
Source :
Inorganic Chemistry Frontiers. 3:250-262
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), 2016.

Abstract

Addition of N-heterocyclic carbenes (L = 1,3-di-tert-butylimidazol-2-ylidene (ItBu), 1,3-di-iso-propyl-4,5-dimethylimidazol-2-yildene (IiPr2Me2), 1,3-mesitylimidazol-2-yildene (IMes) and 1,3-di-(2,6-di-isopropylphenyl)imidazol-2-yildene (IPr)) to the iron half-sandwich complex [Cp′FeI]2 (Cp′ = η5-1,2,4-(Me3C)3C5H2, 1) forms the neutral, 16VE adducts [Cp′FeI(L)] (2–5) in moderate to excellent yields. These complexes were structurally characterised. The NHC ligand binds strongly to the Fe(II) atom, so that no exchange is observed on the NMR and chemical time scale. Fe(II) atoms in the starting material 1 adopt a high-spin configuration (S = 2) and are weakly antiferromagnetically coupled at low temperatures. Furthermore, in contrast to previous reports on related [(η5-C5Me5)FeCl(NHC)] systems, in which the Fe(II) atoms assume an intermediate spin (S = 1), no spin state change occurs upon coordination of the NHC ligand; the Fe(II) atoms in complexes 2–5 retain their high-spin state (S = 2) as shown by solid state magnetic susceptibility and zero-field 57Fe Mossbauer spectroscopy investigations. Density functional theory (DFT) studies at the B3LYP level of theory also agree with a well separated S = 2 ground state for compounds 2–5. Surprisingly for Fe(II) high-spin systems, compounds 1–5 exhibit slow paramagnetic relaxation in their Mossbauer spectra; this can be traced to spin–spin and spin–lattice relaxation processes with unusually large spin–lattice relaxation barriers. A structural model is proposed that associates these processes with crystal packing effects.

Details

ISSN :
20521553
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Inorganic Chemistry Frontiers
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c58b9ac9659d46c2c718beb483539f17
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/c5qi00235d