Abstract

The equilibrium geometries, thermochemistry, and vibrational frequencies of the homoleptic binuclear rhenium carbonyls Re2(CO)n (n = 10, 9, 8, 7) were determined using the MPW1PW91 and BP86 methods from density functional theory (DFT) with the effective core potential basis sets LANL2DZ and SDD. In all cases triplet structures for Re2(CO)n were found to be unfavorable energetically relative to singlet structures, in contrast to corresponding Mn2(CO)n derivatives, apparently owing to the larger ligand field splitting of rhenium. For M2(CO)10 (M = Mn, Re) the unbridged structures (OC)5M-M(CO)5 are preferred energetically over structures with bridging CO groups. For M2(CO)9 (M = Mn, Re) the two low energy structures are (OC)4M(micro-CO)M(CO)4 with an M-M single bond and a four-electron donor bridging CO group and (OC)4M[double bond, length as m-dash]M(CO)5 with no bridging CO groups and an M[double bond, length as m-dash]M distance suggesting a double bond. The lowest energy structures for Re2(CO)8 have Re[triple bond, length as m-dash]Re distances in the range 2.6-2.7 A suggesting the triple bonds required to give the Re atoms the favored 18-electron configuration. Low energy structures for Re2(CO)7 are either of the type (OC)(4)M[triple bond, length as m-dash]M(CO)3 with short metal-metal distances suggesting triple bonds or have a single four-electron donor bridging CO group and longer M-M distances consistent with single or double bonds. The 18-electron rule thus appears to be violated in these highly unsaturated Re2(CO)7 structures.

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