Abstract

Ein Diuran(V)-Arenkomplex spaltet P4 reduktiv unter Bildung eines Triuranheptaphosphanortricyclan-Clusters (siehe Bild; U grün, P rosa, N blau, Si orange). Dieser erste molekulare Actinoid-[P7]-Zintl-Komplex entsteht durch eine neuartige uranvermittelte Verknüpfung von P4-Molekülen und setzt in einer Reihe von Reaktionen unter milden Bedingungen P7R3-Phosphanortricyclane frei. Zintl clusters,1 exemplified by the heptaphosphanortricyclane trianion [P7]3−, are fundamentally interesting and important structural units in solid-state and molecular chemistry.1, 2 Their importance derives from the key role they have played in the development of polyhedral bonding models and isoelectronic relationships to cycloalkanes as well as synthetic applications.3–5 There is currently major interest in the activation of elemental phosphorus.6 This is because phosphorus-containing molecules are ubiquitous and form the basis of numerous industries, yet their synthesis relies on chlorination of P4 to give PCl3 followed by multistep derivatizations. A highly attractive concept is to avoid the need for PCl3 and access organophosphorus compounds directly from elemental phosphorus. In principle, [P7]3− is an attractive precursor to organophosphorus derivatives; however, although Group 1 derivatives can be prepared straightforwardly in liquid ammonia, high-temperature melts have a reputation for detonating in the presence of traces of moisture, and Na/K reduction of phosphorus in ethers gives non-stoichiometric mixtures.7 Unlike main-group and late-transition-metal-mediated activation of P4,8, 9 examples of early metal-mediated transformations of P4 are far less common.10 In Group 3 and 4f-block chemistry, despite the potentially strongly reducing nature of these metals, activation of P4 is surprisingly rare,11 presumably because of the hard–soft mismatch between the electropositive metal and soft phosphorus.12 For 5f metals, reports of P4 activation are exceptionally rare; there is one report of thorium-mediated activation of P4 at elevated temperature or with co-reagents,13 and only two examples of uranium-mediated activation of P4 are known.14 However, for both uranium cases it is notable that no fragmentation or catenation of P4 was observed and instead only cleavage of two of the PP bonds in P4 to give [P4]2− rings was observed. Indeed, early metal-mediated conversion of P4 to [P7]3− is in general a rare occurrence.6, 11c,11d Herein, we report that a diuranium(V)–arene-tetraanion complex reductively cleaves P4 to selectively form a triuranium heptaphosphanortricyclane cluster under mild conditions. This cluster is the first example of a molecular actinide [P7] Zintl complex and the first example of fragmentation and catenation of P4 to a higher oligomer promoted by uranium. Additionally, it is notable that no binary uranium phosphides are formed. Furthermore, we show that this complex is a precursor to a wide range of facile derivatization reactions in closed synthetic cycles for the activation and functionalization of P4 under mild conditions. Treatment of [{U(TsTol)}2(μ-η6:η6-C6H5CH3)]15 (1, TsTol=HC(SiMe2NAr)3; Ar=4-MeC6H4) with P4 (1:1.1 of 1:P4) afforded, after work-up and isolation, brown crystals of the Zintl complex [{U(TsTol)}3(μ3-η2:η2:η2-P7)] (2) in 12 % yield of crystalline product (Scheme 1). This low yield reflects the surprisingly high solubility of 2, but by 1H NMR spectroscopy we estimate about 65 % of the crude reaction mixture is 2, with some protonated ligand present, presumably from minor decomposition.16 The 1H NMR spectrum of crystalline 2 is broad and the complex is silent in the 31P NMR spectrum in the range ±1000 ppm, which is most likely as a result of a combination of a reduction of the intensities of resonances owing to extensive nJPP couplings (n=1, 2, 3),2–5, 17 and line-broadening that is due to dynamic processes and fast relaxation from the presence of coordinated uranium centers. Variable-temperature 1H and 31P NMR spectroscopy could not freeze out any dynamic processes or induce coalescence to one time-averaged species, which is most likely due to the effects described above. Germane to this point, the [P7]3− trianion is well-known to undergo facile and very complicated Cope-type rearrangements in solution that are similar to bullvalene,18 and we suggest this contributes to the origin of the broad NMR resonances. The magnetic moment of pure 2 in solution was found to be 4.67 μB at 298 K. In reasonable agreement with this, the magnetic moment of powdered 2 was found to be 4.20 μB at 298 K; this decreases slowly on cooling down to ca. 80 K before falling more precipitously, reaching 1.25 μB at 1.8 K and still decreasing. The room-temperature moment corresponds to 2.42 μB per uranium(IV) ion; this is significantly lower than the value calculated for a free 3H4 term (3.58 μB), but this is a common observation for uranium(IV). For example, [U(TsXy)Co(CO)3(PPh3)] (Xy=xylyl; the Co is diamagnetic) contains a single uranium(IV) ion with a near identical capping ligand and has a room-temperature moment of 2.77 μB,19 close to the value per uranium ion we observe for 2 and this supports a uranium(IV) formulation. It is noticeable that the magnetic moment of 2 decreases with decreasing temperature more slowly than is commonly observed for uranium(IV), but this has been observed before in [U(TsXy)Co(CO)3(PPh3)] and [UO(N′′)3][CoCp*2] (N′′=N(SiMe3)2), which both contain uranium(IV) centers.19, 20 The electronic absorption spectrum of 2 is dominated by charge transfer bands in the 25 000–12 000 cm−1 region, and a number of surprisingly intense absorptions (ε=120–250 L mol−1 cm−1) that are as assigned as f→f transitions are observed in the 12 000–5000 cm−1 region; the presence of the latter supports the uranium(IV) formulation. Synthesis of 2. Reagents and conditions: i) P4 (1.1 equiv) in toluene, −toluene. Ar=p-tolyl. To confirm the structure of 2, the X-ray crystal structure was determined (Figure 1).21 The salient feature of 2 is the formation of a [P7]3− trianion that bridges three [U(TsTol)]+ fragments, where each uranium center coordinates to two phosphorus centers on the upper rim of the [P7]3− trianion. The UP bond lengths span the range 2.9486(17)–3.0308(17) Å, which compares to the sum of the covalent radii of 2.81 Å for uranium and phosphorus,22 and most likely reflects the sterically demanding nature of the {U(TsTol)}+ fragments and the bridging coordination mode. The UN and PP bond lengths are unexceptional. A common parameter used to assess the extent of ionic character in [P7]3− trianions is the Q value,1, 7e, 23 where Q=h/a (h=distance from the apical P-center to the center-point of the lower rim of three P-centers; a=average PP distance in the lower rim). For ionic systems, the Q value is typically 1.3–1.4 (for example, in P7(SiR3)3 derivatives), and for 2 the Q value is 1.39, which is suggestive of predominantly electrostatic UP bonding. The computational size of 2 rendered a full DFT analysis of 2 intractable, but a preliminary single-point energy calculation on 2 revealed the UP interactions to be essentially ionic, which is in agreement with the structural and NMR spectroscopic data. Molecular structure of 2 with ellipsoids set at 40 % probability; hydrogen atoms, minor disorder components, and lattice solvent are omitted for clarity. With 2 in hand, we undertook preliminary experiments to explore its synthetic utility under ambient conditions, Scheme 2,16 because, although the activation of white phosphorus is burgeoning, subsequent functionalization and liberation reactions are not common6, 24 and are often limited to silyl derivatives.11c To benchmark the reactivity of 2, we treated 2 with three equivalents of Me3SiCl to quantitatively afford P7(SiMe3)325 and [(TsTol)U(Cl)(μ-Cl)U(THF)2(TsTol)]26 (3, after the addition of THF); both of these compounds are known and were identified by 1H and 31P NMR spectroscopies. Encouraged by the facile reactivity of 2, we examined more challenging electrophiles. Lithium chloride reacts quantitatively with 2 to afford 3 (after the addition of THF and tmeda) and P7[Li(tmeda)]3.27 This is notable because alkali-metal derivatives of [P7]3− can be difficult to prepare. In the context of organophosphorus derivative chemistry, we find that excess methyl iodide and phenyl iodide both react cleanly and quantitatively with 2 to afford P7(Me)328 and P7(Ph)3,29 respectively, with concomitant formation of 3 (after the addition of THF), whereas these phosphanortricyclanes were previously not straightforward to prepare. This broad palate of reactions establishes that sp3 and sp2 (aromatic) carbon-based electrophiles can be substituted onto the [P7]3− framework in PC bond forming reactions from 2, thus providing extensive opportunities for subsequent functionalization and derivatization chemistry. Reactions of 2 with electrophiles. Reagents and conditions (all at RT): i) excess Me3SiCl, C6D6, THF, −3; ii) 3 LiCl, C6D6, THF, 3 tmeda, −3; iii) excess MeI, C6D6, THF, −3; iv) PhI, C6D6, THF, −3. As 3 is the direct precursor to 1, the derivatization chemistry described herein presents the closure of synthetic cycles for the activation and functionalization of white phosphorus (Scheme 3). In practice, two turnovers could be achieved before the mixture of products rendered subsequent reactions unfeasible. The yields of the polyphosphide derivatives for the first turnover were generally quantitative, but this dropped to circa 40 % in the second turnover, reflecting the buildup of inorganic salts and the diminishing yields of 1 and 2 in each turnover. However, the diverse and straightforward nature of these reactions suggests that 2 is amenable to reactions with a wide range of functional electrophiles, and reactions to extend the scope and efficacy of this reactivity are ongoing. Synthetic cycle for the catenation and functionalization of white phosphorus by 1 via 2. To conclude, the reaction of P4 with [{U(TsTol)}2(μ-η6:η6-C6H5CH3)] affords the first example of an actinide [P7] Zintl complex and the first example of fragmentation and catenation of P4 promoted by uranium. This Zintl complex is a precursor to a range of derivatives that represent general methods for the preparation of alkali-metal-, hydrocarbon-, aromatic-, and silyl-functionalized P7 derivatives via LiP, PC (sp2- and sp3-hybridized carbon groups), and PSi bond formation reactions. This offers significant synthetic scope for the closure of synthetic cycles for the activation and functionalization of P4 under mild conditions and further demonstrates the ability of triamido uranium complexes to activate and liberate functionalized small molecules.30 Synthesis of 2: Toluene (20 mL) was added to a cold (−78 °C) stirring mixture of 1 (0.79 g, 0.50 mmol) and P4 (0.07 g, 0.55 mmol). The mixture was stirred at −78 °C for 5 min, then was allowed to warm to room temperature, and it was then stirred for a further 16 h. All volatiles were removed in vacuo. The product was extracted into hexanes (10 mL), filtered, and the hexanes extract was stored at room temperature for 16 h to yield large brown blocks of 1 (Crystalline yield: 0.10 g, 12 %). Inspection of the crude reaction mixture showed that 2 constitutes about 65 % of the reaction mixture. Anal. calcd. (%) for C84H120N9P7Si9U3⋅C6H14: C 42.80, H 5.35, N 4.99 %; found: C 42.63, H 5.34, N 4.82 %. 1H NMR (C6D6): δH=15–11.50 (27 H, vb s, Ar-CH3), 1.75–0 (36 H, vb s, o and m-CH), −1.75–−4.50 (54 H, v br s, SiCH3), −73.31 ppm (3 H, s, SiCH). Magnetic moment (Evans’ method, C6D6, 298 K): μeff=4.67 μB. FTIR (Nujol): 1604 (w), 1513 (w), 1495 (s), 1403 (w), 1364 (w), 1286 (w), 1251 (m), 1243 (m), 1221 (s), 1171 (w), 1102 (w), 1015 (w), 974 (m), 933 (m), 899 (s), 858 (s), 841 (vs), 810 (s), 765 (w), 708 (m), 697 (w), 543 (w), 503 (m) cm−1. UV/Vis/NIR (toluene): λmax (ε/L mol−1 cm−1): 1033–1139 (217, 200), 1457 (119), 1622 (130), 1844 (151), 2053–2278 (158, 146). As a service to our authors and readers, this journal provides supporting information supplied by the authors. Such materials are peer reviewed and may be re-organized for online delivery, but are not copy-edited or typeset. Technical support issues arising from supporting information (other than missing files) should be addressed to the authors. Please note: The publisher is not responsible for the content or functionality of any supporting information supplied by the authors. Any queries (other than missing content) should be directed to the corresponding author for the article.

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