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  • Interplay among tetrahedrane, butterfly diradical, and planar rhombus structures in the chemistry of the binuclear iron carbonyl phosphinidene complexes Fe2(CO)6(PX)2.

Interplay among tetrahedrane, butterfly diradical, and planar rhombus structures in the chemistry of the binuclear iron carbonyl phosphinidene complexes Fe2(CO)6(PX)2.

Journal of the American Chemical Society (2008-01-01)
Ioan Silaghi-Dumitrescu, Thomas E Bitterwolf, R Bruce King
ABSTRACT

Density functional theory studies on a series of Fe2(CO)6(PX)2 derivatives show the tetrahedrane to be the most stable for the alkyl (X = Me, tBu), P-H (X = H), and chloro (X = Cl) derivatives. However, butterfly diradical and planar rhombus structures are found to be more stable than tetrahedranes for the amino (X = NH2, NMe2, and NiPr2) and aryloxy (R = 2,6-tBu2-4-Me-C6H2O) derivatives. For the chloro (X = Cl) and methoxy (X = OMe) derivatives energetically accessible bishomotetrahedrane Fe2(CO)6P2(mu-X)2 isomers are observed in which the X substituents on the phosphorus atoms interact with the iron atom to form two direct Fe-X bonds at the expense of two of the four Fe-P bonds. In addition, the global minimum for the hydroxy (X = OH) derivative is an unusual FeP-butterfly structure with a central Fe-P bond as well as two external Fe-P bonds, one external P-P bond, and one external Fe=Fe double bond. Comparison of calculated with experimental nu(CO) frequencies shows that low-temperature Nujol matrix photolysis of (iPr2NP)2COFe2(CO)6 leads to a planar rhombus rather than a tetrahedrane isomer of Fe2(CO)6(PNiPr2)2.