Determination of the bonding preference of borane (BH3) toward aminoarsines by multinuclear nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy
Abstract
The reactions of BH3·thf (thf = tetrahydrofuran) with selected (dialkylamino)dimethylarsines, Me2AsNR2(R = Me, Et, Prn, or Pri) have been carried out as a function of temperature to determine the initial co-ordination site of boron and to elucidate the nature of any As–N, As–B, and N–B bond dissociation/formation processes in solution. The reactions were monitored by multinuclear (1H, 11B, and 13C) n.m.r. spectroscopy over a temperature range of –90 to 25 °C. With Me2AsNMe2, a N–B bonded adduct is formed at low temperature, which decomposes at 25 °C to yield (Me2NBH2)2, Me2NH·BH3, µ-Me2NB2H5, and Me2AsAsMe2. Equimolar amounts of As–B and N–B adducts are formed at low temperature when Me2AsNEt2 is reacted with BH3·thf. With increasing temperature, the As–B adduct converts to the N–B adduct, which subsequently decomposes at room temperature to µ-Et2NB2H5, Et2NH·BH3, (Et2NBH2)2, and Me2AsAsMe2. The reaction of Me2AsNPrn2 with BH3·thf yields more of the As–B adduct than of the N–B adduct at –90 °C, but the former rearranges to the latter on warming. Only the As–B adduct is formed in the reaction of Me2AsNPri2 with BH3·thf. These results suggest that the steric bulkiness of the R2N moiety plays an important role in determining the co-ordination site of the boron in this series of compounds.