A dynamic nuclear magnetic resonance study of trimethylplatinum(IV) halide complexes of 1,1,2,2-tetrakis(methylthio)ethane. Part 1. Low-temperature solution properties, and X-ray crystal structure of [PtlMe3{(MeS)2CHCH(SMe)2}]
Abstract
Trimethylplatinum(IV) halides [(PtXMe3)4] react with equimolar amounts of the ligand (MeS)2CHCH(SMe)2(L) to give chelate complexes of type [PtXMe3L] as major products and dinuclear complexes [(PtXMe3)2L] as minor components. The chelate complexes in CDCl3 solution exist as cis and trans configurational isomers, with the trans predominating. At temperatures below ca.–30 °C, pyramidal inversion of the co-ordinated S atoms is slow on the 1H and 195Pt time-scales and six invertomer species (viz. trans/DL-1,2,3, and 4 and cis-1 /meso-1 and DL) have been detected, identified, and characterised by 1H and 195Pt n.m.r. spectroscopy. The pyramidal inversion rates and energies of the co-ordinated S atom pairs in all six invertomers have been quantitatively measured by a combination of 1H bandshape analysis and 195Pt two-dimensional EXSY experiments. The resulting ΔG‡(298.15 K) values lie in the range 54–65 kJmol–1 and are governed primarily by the orientation of the contiguous unco-ordinated S-methyl group. The X-ray crystal structure of [PtlMe3{(MeS)2CHCH(SMe)2}] depicts the ligand with its co-ordinated S-methyls trans to each other and trans to their contiguous unco-ordinated S-methyls. This structure corresponds to the most populous CDCl3solution invertomer (trans/DL-2).
- This article is part of the themed collection: Professor Edward Abel Honorary Collection