Abstract

White phosphorus (P(4)) reacts with three-coordinate molybdenum(III) trisamides or molybdaziridine hydride complexes to produce either bridging or terminal phosphide (P(3)(-)) species, depending upon the ancillary ligand steric demands. Thermochemical measurements have been made that place the MoP triple bond dissociation enthalpy at 92.2 kcal.mol(-)(1). Thermochemical measurements together with computational analysis rule out simple P-atom abstraction from P(4) as a step in the phosphorus activation mechanism. Kinetic measurements made by the stopped-flow method show that the reaction between the monomeric molybdenum complexes and P(4) is first-order both in metal complex and in P(4). Cyclo-P(3) complexes can be obtained when ancillary ligand steric demands are small, but kinetic measurements rule them out as monometallic intermediates in the P(4) activation mechanism. Also studied by calorimetric, kinetic, and in one case variable-temperature NMR methods is the process of mu-phosphide bridge formation. Post-rate-determining steps of the P(4) activation process were examined in a search for minima on the reaction's potential energy surface, leading to the proposal of two plausible, parallel, bimetallic reaction channels.

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