Roland C.
Fischer
a,
Michael S.
Hill
b and
David J.
Liptrot
b
aInstitut für Anorganische Chemie, Technische Universität Graz, Stremayrgasse 9, A-8010 Graz, Austria
bDepartment of Chemistry, University of Bath, Claverton Down, Bath, BA2 7AY, UK
Power was born in the Republic of Ireland and undertook a BA in Chemistry at Trinity College, Dublin, completed in 1974. He subsequently crossed the Irish Sea, completing a PhD at the University of Sussex in 1977. This was followed by a postdoctoral stay at Stanford University and his appointment to the University of California, Davis in 1981. During his career Power has been the recipient of awards too numerous to list here, perhaps most notably both the Ludwig Mond Medal of the RSC and F. A. Cotton Award of the ACS in 2005. He was appointed a Fellow of the Royal Society in this same year. Power has been committed in the service of the chemical community, acting as an Associate Editor of Inorganic Chemistry, editor of volume 37 of Inorganic Syntheses, and having served on the advisory boards of twelve journals including Dalton Transactions.
Over the course of his career, a significant proportion of Power's oeuvre has been published in RSC journals, charting a course from his very earliest contribution to some of his most recent enterprises. In honour of Professor Power's birthday we have put together a web collection of his highlights in RSC journals. These publications are landmarks and continue to have outstanding impact on the chemical community. In the following, we refer to these key publications in RSC journals to revisit some milestones in his career.
Alongside these, we have invited previous co-workers, collaborators and chemists whose work shares an affinity with Professor Power's to submit innovative research close in theme to his foci in Dalton Transactions and Chemical Communications. This collection reveals a chemist with wide-ranging interests and a propensity for timely research, coupled with a cerebral dedication to conceptual frameworks which have helped to unify organometallic chemistry's vibrant cutting edges.
A focus on low-coordinate, low-valent and low-oxidation state compounds defines Power's career and molecules in this class generally feature a small energy difference between frontier orbitals. This results in highly sensitive compounds, initially providing Power a synthetic challenge and subsequently allowing him to report unprecedented reactivity. Within this theme, Power has worked in a wide range of areas as summarised hereafter.
Whilst Power has regularly returned to p-block compounds, he has worked with all blocks of the periodic table, and the terphenyls have been ably applied to transition metal chemistry. This approach yielded unusual univalent Cr(I), Mn(I) and Fe(I) complexes8 as well as a two-coordinate heteroleptic Co(II) species, ArPri4CoN(SiMe3)2,9 amongst others. Through one of Power's multitude of fruitful collaborations ArPri4CoN(SiMe3)2 was shown to have unusual magnetic properties and a subsequent analysis of low coordinate, highly anisotropic systems contributed to a new perspective on single molecule magnetism.10
As well as describing many new compounds in the literature, Power has shown a yen for chasing down chemical mysteries from the past, most recently through his reinvestigation of the nickel bisamide Ni{N(SiMe3)2}2 first reported by Bürger and Wannagat in the early 1960s.11a–c This willingness to challenge accepted conclusions has been a theme throughout Power's career, and even his own theories are not immune from re-evaluation. Power has contributed to a range of useful reviews over the years, including the seminal text on [M(NR2)n] compounds, Metal Amide Chemistry, with Lappert, Protchenko and Seeber.12
Beyond homoleptic species, the terphenyls have provided an excellent co-ligand for a variety of substituents on main group compounds. This has allowed the interrogation of divalent group 14 halides and hydrides, Ar*MX (M = Ge, Sn, Pb; X = H, Cl, Br), the latter of which show fascinating structural isomerism.13 These compounds have provided a source of much interesting reactivity, and Power has also used them as starting materials for clusters14 and multiply bonded species (vide infra). Power has also implicated tin(II) hydrides as catalytic intermediates in the isohypsic dehydrogenative coupling of amines and boranes, emphasising his willingness to confront any challenge in the field.15
Power's focus on multiply bonded species undiminished, the dipnictenes provided a rich seam of compounds such as in his report “Unsymmetric dipnictenes—synthesis and characterization of MesP = EC6H3-2,6-Trip2 (E = As or Sb; Mes = C6H2-2,4,6-Me3, Trip = C6H2-2,4,6-Pri3)”.18 “Homonuclear multiple bonding in heavier main group elements”19 demonstrates Power's provision of a range of useful and often field-defining reviews. These articles, in general, are more than a mere compilation of compounds, synthetic pathways and structural data, but instead draw attention towards unifying concepts in structure and reactivity.
Power's attack on unsaturated heavier group 14 compounds was, however, not over and at this point the utility of the terphenyl system became apparent. Judicious, and readily accessible, alteration of the ligand coupled with Power's commitment to synthetic excellence allowed access to the heavier alkyne analogues Ar*MMAr* (M = Ge, Sn, Pb). Subsequently, group 13 analogues were similarly accessed with reports of Ar*MMAr* (M = Ga, In, Tl), the gallium congener of which is the source of an oft heard comment in Power's lab; “green is good”. Power then reviewed this area20 and went on to modify the enduringly modular terphenyl system to analyse ligand effects on the metal–metal interaction in these species.21 These compounds, landmarks in organometallic synthesis, have made it into textbooks and contributed much to change the field's perception of multiple bonding. Thus, Power's syntheses of beautiful compounds are not simply stamp collecting, but an opportunity to interrogate unique molecular systems. This fact is best displayed in his assessment of the reactivity of heavier main group multiple bonds.
Power's work with the ditetrylynes showed reactivity towards activated alkenes22 and nitrosyl compounds23 amongst others. However, it is for their reactivity towards small molecules, otherwise considered inert to main group species under ambient conditions, that Power's heavier alkyne analogues are most well-known. In the paper “Addition of H2 to distannynes under ambient conditions”,24 Power contributed to a recognition that certain main group compounds could be “transition metal mimetic”, an understanding which has helped push back the frontiers of organometallic chemistry in the s- and p-blocks. The aforementioned multiply bonded group 13 compounds also readily activate olefins.25
The marked ability of terphenyl ligands to support multiple bonding is by no means isolated to the p-block. The synthesis of a Cr–Cr quintuple bond applying these ligands is one of Power's most well-known contributions, and this bond was shown to react with unsaturated nitrogen compounds.26 Beyond multiple bonded species, Power has done much to assess the reactivity of homoleptic diaryls of both main group and transition metal species with small molecules, for example in his paper “Insertion reactions of a two-coordinate iron diaryl with dioxygen and carbon monoxide”.27
Power has recently begun to evaluate the importance of C–H⋯H–C dispersion interactions in rationalising the structure and reactivity of main group and d-block compounds. It is thus fitting that this editorial closes with reference to a paper from Power which addresses a compound he first encountered during his PhD, and reflects his collaborative approach to science. In 2015, Power, in collaboration with Professor Shigeru Nagase, reassessed the question of M–M bonding in [M{CH(SiMe3)2}2]2 (M = Ge, Sn, Pb) and concluded “although much effort has been expended in development of bonding models for the multiple bonds between heavier main group elements, it seems both probable and ironic that the dispersion force attraction forces exceed those of the multiple bonds in many instances and that a variety of more subtle interactions including packing effects are of key importance for the understanding of their bonding”.28
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