Oxidative-addition reaction of platinum acetylacetonate with iodine in solid state and solution. Crystal structure and equilibrium studies of trans-bis(acetylacetonato)di-iodoplatinum(IV)
Abstract
Pt(acac)2(acac = acetylacetonate) undergoes an oxidative-addition reaction with molecular iodine both in solution and in the solid state to yield trans-Pt(acac)2I2. In solution the reaction is readily reversible, and data for the equilibrium were determined spectrophotometrically. Mass spectral data of volatilized Pt(acac)2I2 indicate that the same equilibrium also occurs in the gas phase. A three-dimensional X-ray diffraction study from diffractometer data has established the stereochemistry of Pt(acac)2I2. Crystals are triclinic, space group P
, with Z= 1 in a unit cell of dimensions a= 7·802, b= 8·703, c= 7·646, α= 95·866°, β= 116·321°, γ= 114·844°. The structure was solved by Patterson and Fourier methods and refined by least squares to R 4·0% for 654 independent observations. The molecule lies on a crystallographic centre of symmetry. Each PtIV is octahedrally co-ordinated by two oxygen-chelated acetylacetonate ligands and by two iodine atoms in a trans-configuration which deviates only slightly from D2h symmetry. The molecules are identically oriented in layers such that each iodine ligand has one unusually close intermolecular I ⋯ I contact of 3·559(2)Å. This short distance is indicative of weak intermolecular bonds leading to infinite chains of weakly linked molecules. The readily occurring solid-state reaction of crystalline Pt(acac)2 with solid I2 may involve diffusion by molecular iodine into the crystalline lattice of Pt(acac)2, followed by electron transfer from the PtII to the I2 molecule with concomitant cleavage of the molecular iodine bond to give PtIV–I formation.
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