Abstract

The unidentate pentaamminecobalt(III) linkage isomers of phthalamic and malonamic acids bonded through the deprotonated amide nitrogen or the carboxylate group have been synthesized and characterized. The carboxylate-bonded complexes were synthesized directly from their amidic acids; they, as well as carboxylate-bonded succinamic acid, solvolyzed very slowly in aqueous acid ( 1 M, t 1 2 days) and at pH 10 they decomposed very slowly; the amide group was not hydrolyzed while the amidic acid ligand was bonded to the metal. The malonamato- N complex was prepared by base hydrolysis at pH 7 of the corresponding cyanoacetate- N complex. Pentaammine (phthalamato- N)cobalt(III) was synthesized by base catalyzed hydration of the corresponding phthalimido- N complex; the latter was prepared directly from free ligand and pentaammine (dimethyl sulfoxide) cobalt(III). The rate law for the base catalyzed hydration (10 −7 M ≤ [OH −] ≤ 0.05 M) of the phthalimido- N complex is: k ohs = k OH [OH −] where K OH = 0.40 M −1 s 1 (25°C, I = 1.0 M (NaCl). In acid the amido- N linkage isomers are protonated on both the amide oxygen and on the carboxylate group. In water they undergo the usual solvolysis and amide- N to O rearrangement, but, concurrently, amide- N to carboxylate-bonded rearrangement. This first-formed amide- O complexes aquate relatively rapidly so that the observed products were the pentaammineaquacobalt(III) complex and the carboxylate-bonded complexes of malonamic acid (73%), phthalamic acid (36%) and succinamic acid (24%), respectively. In Me 2SO-d 6 amide- N to O and amide- N to carboxylate-bonded rearrangements were observed directly, with the ultimate products being pentaammine (dimethyl sulfoxide) cobalt(III) and the carboxylate-bonded complexes of malonamic acid (10%), phthalamic (33%) and succinamic acid (5%), respectively. The effects of a one-versus two-C length organic backbone, flexible (−CH 2CH 2−) versus rigid ( o-phenylene) geometry, and solvent (H 2O versus Me 2SO) in influencing the competitive rearrangements are considered.

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