Kinetics of ligand substitution in bis(N-t-butylsalicylideneiminato)copper(II): aprotic organic solvents as media
Abstract
Stopped-flow spectrophotometry has been used to study the kinetics of ligand substitution in the title complex [Cu(Butsaln)2] with N-ethylsalicylideneimine in a variety of aprotic organic solvents. The rate of substitution follows a two-term rate law, rate =(k0+kligand[ligand])[complex], with the substitution of the first ligand being rate controlling. It is shown that the ligand-independent rate term k0 represents the sum of the genuine solvent contribution ks, of a water contribution (kH2OI[H2O]+kH2OII[H2O]2), and of contributions caused by protic admixtures such as methanol, e.g. kMeOH[MeOH]. The investigation of the dependence k0= f([H2O]) reveals that for toluene and carbon tetrachloride ks= 0. The ks values obtained for the aprotic solvents dimethylformamide, dimethylacetamide, tetramethylurea, dimethyl sulphoxide, acetonitrile, nitromethane, and pyridine lie in the range 10–4–10–2 s–1. Their correlation with solvent parameters such as dielectric constant, donor or acceptor number, fluidity, or Reichardt's ET(30) value is unsatisfactory, whereas the activation energy for the k0 path correlates reasonably well with the heat of vaporization of the solvents. The size of kligand, kMeOH, and especially kH2OI varies with the type of aprotic solvent, the reactivity of water, kH2OI being 2 000-fold greater in toluene than in dimethylformamide. Admixtures of 2,4-dimethylpentan-3-ol and 3-ethylpentan-3-ol to carbon tetrachloride act as water scavengers and suppress the water contribution to k0. The mechanism of the various substitution pathways induced by the solvent, by water, and by the incoming ligand is discussed.