Abstract

The preference for coplanarity of alkenyl and carbonyl ligands in η1-alkenyl transition-metal complexes can be understood in terms of a simple molecular orbital model in which the nonbonding metal t2g orbitals interact with the π* orbitals of these ligands. Such back-bonding interactions are most favorable when the alkenyl and carbonyl ligands are coplanar, as all three t2g orbitals are utilized by the ligands. Optimized geometries obtained from ab initio calculations for a variety of ruthenium alkenyl complexes show the preference for alkenyl−carbonyl planarity when only one or two carbonyl ligands are present in the complex. In these complexes the energy required to rotate the alkenyl ligand is calculated to be approximately 7 kcal/mol, while in complexes with three or more carbonyl ligands this energy decreases due to competition by carbonyl ligands for favorable back-bonding interactions. This competition effectively rules out any preferential alkenyl−carbonyl arrangement, and instead steric interacti...

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