Abstract

Trimethylplatinum(IV) iodide complexes with ditelluroether ligands, namely [PtlMe3(L–L)][L–L = MeTe(CH2)3TeMe, PhTe(CH2)3TePh or o-C6H4(TeMe)2] have been isolated as pure solids. 195Pt-{1H} and 125Te-{1H} NMR studies show that ambient-temperature solutions of the complexes with aliphatic ligand backbones consist predominantly of DL isomers. The complex [PtlMe3{MeTe(CH2)3TeMe}] also exists in significant amounts of both meso forms. In contrast, the meso-1 form is present in only very low abundance in [PtlMe3{PhTe(CH2)3TePh}] and [PtlMe3{o-C6H4(TeMe)2}]. Pyramidal tellurium inversion interconverts these isomeric species and precise rates of this process were measured at near-ambient temperatures by 195Pt-{1H} and 125Te-{1H} NMR two-dimensional exchange spectroscopy experiments, or by 1H one-dimensional NMR bandshape analysis at above-ambient temperatures in the case of [PtlMe3{o-C6H4(TeMe)2}]. Tellurium pyramidal inversion-energy barriers [ΔG‡(298.15 K)] were in the range 70–84 kJ mol–1, reflecting the nature of the the substituent at Te and the ligand backbone. Comparison of the tellurium inversion energy in [PtlMe3{MeTe(CH2)3TeMe}] with data for Se and S in analogous complexes of chalcogen ligands establishes the trend in inversion energies, namely Te > Se > S, on a firm quantitative basis.

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