Abstract

Bis- and tris-pyridyl borate ligands containing pyridyl donor arms, a methylated boron cap, and a fluorine-lined coordination pocket have been prepared and utilized in coinage metal chemistry. The tris(pyridyl)borate ligand has been synthesized using a convenient boron source, [NBu4][MeBF3]. These N-based ligands permitted the isolation of group 11 metal-ethylene complexes [MeB(6-(CF3)Py)3]M(C2H4) and [Me2B(6-(CF3)Py)2]M(C2H4) (M = Cu, Ag, Au). The gold complexes display the largest coordination-induced upfield shifts of the ethylene 13C resonance relative to that of the free ethylene in their NMR spectra, while the silver complexes show the smallest shift. Solid-state structures of five of these metal-ethylene complexes as well as the related free ligands were established by X-ray crystallography. Surprisingly, all three [MeB(6-(CF3)Py)3]M(C2H4) adopt the rare κ2 coordination mode rather than the typical κ3 coordination mode of facial capping tridentate ligands. Computational analyses indicate that κ2 coordination mode is favored over the κ3-mode in these coinage metal-ethylene complexes and point to the effects CF3-substituents have on κ2/κ3-energy difference. The M-C and M-N bond distances of [MeB(6-(CF3)Py)3]M(C2H4) follow the trend expected based on covalent radii of M(I) ions. The calculated ethylene-M interaction energy of κ2-[MeB(6-(CF3)Py)3]M(C2H4) indicated that the gold(I) forms the strongest interaction with ethylene. A comparison to the related poly(pyrazolyl)borates is also presented.

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