Kinetics and mechanism of halogen-bridge cleavage in dimethylaminomethylphenyl-C1,N pallada- and platina-cycles by pyridines. pressure effects, and crystal structures of the N,N-cis reaction product, its N,N-trans orthometallated analogue and a dimer of similar reactivity
Abstract
An ambient and high-pressure stopped-flow kinetic study of the halogen-bridge cleavage reaction in the pallada- and platina-cycles [{M(o-C6H3RCH2NMe2)X}2](M = Pd or Pt; R = H, 4-MeO, 5-Me or 5-F; X = Cl or I) by a series of substituted pyridines in chloroform as solvent revealed that it is a fast, associatively driven second-order process, with strong steric rather than electronic demands. Substituent effects and activation parameters (ΔH‡, ΔS‡ and ΔV‡) were in full accord with the proposed associative mechanism. The Pd dimers transformed into N,N-trans monomers of the type [Pd(o-C6H3RCH2NMe2)X(py)](py = pyridine). In contrast, the Pt counterparts afford N,N-cis species [Pt(o-C6H3RCH2NMe2)X(py)] under the same conditions. The geometry of the N,N-cis complex [Pt{o-C6H3(4-MeO)CH2NMe2}X(py)], as well as of the N,N-trans platinacycle [Pt{o-C6H4C(Me)= NOH}Cl(py)], has been confirmed by X-ray crystallography. The most striking structural differences in the N,N-cis and N,N-trans related platinacycles are the Pt–Cl and Pt–N(py) bond distances [2.300(1) and 2.408(5), 2.138(4) and 2.02(1)Å, respectively]. The crystal structure of trans-[(Bun3P)IPd-(µ-I)2PdI(PBun3)] has also been determined and used to account for its similar reactivity to [{Pd(o-C6H4CH2NMe2)I}2] in the bridge-splitting reaction.