Isolation and crystal structure of a dimeric oxomolybdenum(V) complex containing two ethoxy bridges and one ethanol bridge
Abstract
Reaction of MoCl5 with EtOH in CHCl3 has given the complex [Cl2OMo(µ-OEt)2(µ-HOEt)MoOCl2]1 in essentially quantitative yield. Slow removal of the volatile material from the reaction mixture gives orange crystals of an unsolvated orthorhombic phase [C6H16Cl4Mo2O5, P212121, a= 8.186(2), b= 8.319(2), c= 24.114(4)Å, Z= 4, R= 0.0809, R′= 0.0784], while recrystallisation from CH2Cl2 gives a monoclinic phase incorporating partially occupied disordered CH2Cl2 of crystallisation and containing two molecules of 1 in the asymmetric unit [C12H32Cl8Mo4O10·0.45CH2Cl2, P21/c, a= 8.449(1), b= 22.127(2), c= 19.526(2)Å, β= 96.06(1)°, Z= 4, R= 0.0427, R′= 0.0452]. Compound 1 is of structural interest because it exhibits the unusual feature of two MoV centres bridged by three oxygen atoms, while at the same time furnishing the first example of a bridging ethanol molecule. Compound 1 has been further characterised by IR, 1H NMR and chemical analyses, while magnetic susceptibility measurements showed it to be diamagnetic. This result is consistent with the crystal structures which imply the presence of a Mo–Mo single bond (length ca. 2.69 Å).