A molybdenum-95 and nitrogen-14 nuclear magnetic resonance study of six-co-ordinate hydrotris(3,5-dimethyl-1-pyrazolyl)borate complexes containing a sixteen-electron {Mo(NO)}4 core
Abstract
The mononitrosyl complexes [Mo{HB(Me2pz)3}(NO)XY][HB(Me2pz)3–= hydrotris (3,5-dimethyl-1-pyrazolyl)borate; X = Y = F, Cl, I, OEt, OPh, SPh, or NHPh; X = Cl, Y = SPh, OPh, OEt, NHC6H4Br-p, NHC6H4Me-p, or NHEt; X = I, Y = OPh, NHC6H4Me-p, NHEt, or NHNMe2] have been studied in solution by 95Mo and 14N n.m.r. spectroscopy. The iodo complex, [Mo{HB(Me2pz)3}(NO)I2], exhibits a 95Mo resonance at δ 2 272, the most deshielded monomeric MoII resonance reported to date. Replacement of the iodo ligands of [Mo{HB(Me2pz)3}(NO)I2] by other ligands increases the shielding of the 95Mo nucleus according to the general trend, I– < Cl– < F– < thiolato < alkoxy < amido. A chemical shift range of δ 161–2 272 was observed for the complexes studied. The complexes exhibit an inverse halogen dependence of the chemical shift. The nitrosyl ligand 14N chemical shifts follow the same shielding trend as the 95Mo chemical shifts.
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