Abstract
Reactivity of the 4-coordinate molecule (PNP)RhO (PNP is (tBu2PCH2SiMe2)2N) towards CO proceeds stepwise, first forming an η2-CO2 complex, by a mechanism which involves a preliminary adduct of CO on Rh, then a second CO displaces CO2. Reaction of the oxo complex with CO2 occurs in time of mixing even at low temperature to form (PNP)Rh(η2-CO3), with no intermediate detectable. DFT calculations indicate an initial bond formation between the oxo center and the CO2 carbon. Reaction of (PNP)RhO with H2 occurs only at a 1 : 2 molar stoichiometry, to ultimately form (PNP)Rh(H)2 and free H2O. No intermediate reaches detectable population even at −60 °C, but DFT mapping of various possible mechanisms on the singlet energy surface shows that the nearly equi-energetic (PNP)Rh(H2O) and (PNP)RhH(OH) are formed, but only the latter readily adds the second molecule of H2 to proceed to the observed products; these reactions thus both involve heterolytic splitting of H2.
- This article is part of the themed collection: In Celebration of David Cole-Hamilton's Career in Chemistry