Metal Carbonyls. III. Carbon Monoxide Exchange ... - ACS Publications

Metal Carbonyls. III. Carbon Monoxide Exchange ... - ACS Publicationshttps://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1021/ja01464a004by A Wojcicki - ‎1961 - ‎...
0 downloads 0 Views 485KB Size
525

CARBON MONOXIDE EXCHANGE WITH METALCARBONYL HALIDES

Feb. 5 , 1961

0 I1

(oc)3co---j---co(co)3 /c\\c/C6H5

Therefore it would appear that a t least one carbonyl bridge is required for the rapid exchange of CO in these binuclear cobalt systems. In keeping with these observations, a possible mechanism may be 0

II

(OC)3CO-/c\ ---Co(CO)s \C/

-

0 0

11

C (oc)*co~c~co(co)3

II

0

slow -CO

/I

Ti

0

0

I/

/c\

(oc)3co----co(co)4

+ co

/I

(7)

/c\ J(OC)4Co----Co(CO)4

Since all eight CO's exchange a t the same rate (Fig. 2), i t is necessary that free rotation about the cobalts in the active intermediates be assumed possible. The reaction between 1- and 2-hexyne and C O ~ ( C Owas ) ~ investigated4 and i t was postulated that these reactions may involve a reactive biradical intermediate. On this basis, it is possible that the CO exchange may follow the reaction scheme (8). These two mechanisms are very similar and cannot be distinguished with the data now available. Other mechanisms, also in accord with the experimental observations, could be cited but this would serve no useful purpose because the details of the

THE

0

(oc)3co~c'co(co)4 \C/

slow( ?)

li

7(OC)4Co-c-co(CO)4

li

- co

[CONTRIBUTION FROM

0

/I

0 fast

+CO fast

0

exchange process cannot yet be assigned. The two mechanisms proposed are intended to represent in a general way the type of process that is perhaps involved and both are consistent with the existence of Coz(C0)g. Acknowledgments.-The authors are thankful for the helpful discussions during the early stages of this research with the following: Prof. E. 0. Fischer, Dr. R. E. Johnson, Prof. R. G. Pearson, Dr. L. S. Meriwether, Dr. H . W. Sternberg and Dr. I. Wender. Suggestions made by Professors R. L. Burwell, Jr., and H. Pines with regard to the exchange apparatus were also most helpful.

CHEMICAL LABORATORIES OF NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY, EVANSTON, ILLINOIS]

Metal Carbonyls. 111. Carbon Monoxide Exchange with Some Metal Carbonyl Halidesl82

B Y ANDREW WOJCICK13AND FRED BASOLO RECEIVED JUNE 9, 1960 Kinetic studies on the exchange of "CO with metal carbonyl halides in solution are reported. The exchange of Mn(CO)5X proceeds by an s N 1 path whereas that of Fe(CO)Ja involves an Sx2 mechanism. The relative rates of exchange of the Mn(CO)5X compounds decrease in the order: M n ( C 0 ) X I > Mn(C0)SBr > Mn(C0)51. This same order was found for CaH5Fe(CO)*X; moreover, CE"Fe(C0)d > CsHaFe(C0)nCN. The exchange for some square planar compounds was too fast to measure.

The kinetics and mechanism of carbon monoxide exchange with metal carbonyls4J and with cyclopentadienyl metal carbonyls' were reported recently. This paper describes the investigation of I4CO exchange with solutions of Mn(CO)gX, C5H6Fe(CO)2X, Fe(C0)4I2, Rhz(CO)4C12, Rh(P(C6Hs)&COCl and Ptz(CO)zC14. (1) For paper I1 on cyclopentadienyl carbonyls see A. Wojcicki and F . Basolo, J . Inorg. Nuclear Chem., in press. (2) Presented in part as paper No. 139 at the XVIIth Congress of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry, Munich, Germany, 1959. (3) Based upon a portion of a thesis submitted by A. W. t o Northwestern University in June 1960, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. (4) D . F . Keeley and R . E. Johnson, J . Inorg. Nuclear Chem., 11, 33 (1959). (5) F . Basolo and A. Wojcicki, Tars JOURPAL, 83, 520 (1961).

Experimental Compounds and Solvents.-The metal carbonyl halides used in this study are all known compounds. They were prepared by the methods described in the literature and characterized by analyses and/or infrared spectra.6 We also wish to acknowledge the gift of a sample of C5H5Fe(CO)2Br by Professor E . 0. Fischer and of a sample of Rh2 (CO)rC12 by Dr. H . W. Sternberg. The solvents used were all puri(6) Mn(C0)aCl and Mn(CO)aBr, E. W. Abel and G. Wilkinson. J. Chem. Soc., 1501 (1959); Mn(C0)aI. E. 0. Brimm, M. A. Lynch, Jr., 76, 3831 (1954); CaHsFe(C0)zX and W. J. Sesny, THIS JOURNAL, (where X = C1, C N ) , T . S. Piper, F . A. Cotton and G . Wilkinsan, J . Inorg. Nuclear Chem., 1, 165 (1955); CaHsFe(CO)zI, T. S. Piper and G. Wilkinson, ibid., 2, 38 (1956); Fe(CO)rII, W. Hieber and G. Bader, Be?., 61B, 1717 (1928); Rh(P(CsHs)s)?COCl, L. Vallarino, J . Chem. Soc.. 2287 (1957); Ftt(CO)rClr, F . Mylius and F . Foerster, Ber., 24, 2424 (1891).

526

ANDREW LYOJCICKIAND FREDBASOLO

fied. The method described by Fieser' W I S used to purify toluene. Thiophene free benzene was refluxed over sodium for several hours and then fractionally distilled, Chioroforrn was dried over CaClpand distilled. Carbon monoxide of C.P. grade, obtained from Matheson Co., was passed through concentrated HZSO,, prior to use. Carbon-14 monoxide (1.0 millicurie, 51.3 ml.), purchased from Tracerlab, Inc., was transferred to a two liter storage flask, diluted to one atmosphere with inactive CO and used in this form. .irgon from the hiatheson Co. was also bubbled through concentrated H2SO4. Exchange and Kinetics.-The apparatus used and the experimental procedure for determining CO exchange in these systems was the same as that described in some detail earlier.5 Briefly, this involved measuring the rate of decrease of radioactivity at constant temperature in a closed system starting with radiocarbon monoxide and inactive metal carbonyl halide in solution. All exchanges arc run at 1 atm. and the partial pressure of CO is varied by dilution with Ar. I n a closed system, the gas is rapidly circulated through the solution so t h a t the rate of diffusion is much greater than the rate of exchange. Light is excluded and the infrared spectra are determined a t the end of each run t o establish whether or not there is m y chemical decomprrsition of the metal carbonyl halide. All of the exchange reactions investigated were found t o follow the McKays equation and give linear plots of log [A0 - A o o / A- Aoo]zreysus time, where A. is the initial radioactivity, A is t h e radioactivity at time t , and AOO is the radioactivity a t equilibrium. The slope of these lines equals k,,,,,,,t/2.303, which is related to ktrue by the equation

where a is the concentration of metal carbonyl halide, a is the order in a, b is the concentration of carbon monoxide in solution, is the order in b , x is the number of exchangeable CO's in the carbonyl, and y is the ratio of total moles of carbon monoxide in the enclosed system to moles of carbon monoxide in solution. Equation (1) is used instead of the usual statistical factor because the carbon monoxide in the experiments was distributed between two phases. Duplicate kinetic runs were made with a 10% precision.

Results Except for Mn(C0)5X,the experimental infinite time radioactivity corresponds to the value calculated on the basis that all CO's in the metal carbonyl halide exchange. For Mn(CO)5X,as shown in Fig. I , one CO exchanges much more slowly than do the other four. Therefore the values of ktrue reported in Table I are calculated on the basis of four CO's undergoing exchange. Data for the exchange of Fe(C0)J2 are given in Table I. Under the exchange conditions, there is some decomposition of the compounds C5H5Fe(C0)2X. Because of this, the data shown in Table I are only approximate and no attempt was made to investigate the dependence of rate on the CO concentration. As shown in Table 11,the exchange rates for the square metal carbonyl halides are much too fast to measure by this technique. Discussion The metal carbonyl halides that were investigated are believed to have three different types of structure. The compounds Mn(C0)gX and Fe(co)4Izare octahedra. C5H5Fe(CO)2Xcompounds "distorted tetrahedra," and the Rh(1) and Pt(I1) compounds are square planar. I t is not possible to make a quantitative comparison of rates of exchange for these systems but qualitatively the rates decrease in the order Rh(1) and Pt(I1) carbonyls (7) L. F. Fieser, "Experiments in Organic Chemistry," D. C Heath a n d Company, New York, N. Y., 1941, p. 3G4. (8) €1. A . C . McKay. Xntt.rre, 142, 907 (1938).

VOl. 83 TABLE I

RATES

OJ7

co

SOME hIETAI, ~ ' , 4 l < l l O X Y I ,

EXCI1ASC.E \ V I r F I

€IAI,IDES IN TOLUENE .IT 31.8' Concn. (mmole/l.) Compound \fn(CO);CI"," \In(CO):Br" ''

Xln(CO)jr"~" F e ( C 0 ) LT?

CaHjFeiCO)zCle CaHsFe(C0)zBrj CjHjFe(CO)zIf CsHaFe(C0)KX'

Com-

p o u n d iCO).e (CO).li 12 I? fi 2 2 4 (i l i 2 I 13 X l(i 0 1; 2 2 G 1.3 2 0.Si 0 :I2 1f:.fi ii.9 2 7 10 0 2 2 0.84 2.3 7 I; li 2 8 18.1 ( i 2 2.7 1.5 8 0.32 0.13 33.3 .28 .12 33 4 .?8 .12 R3.X .?8 ,I2 33 :3 .23 .12

k,,,.,,. (sec. - 1 ) 1 :iX I O - ? ,'3 0 X 10-1 1 8 X 10-1 2 8 X 10-4 5 2 x 10-1

Kt,,.?

(sec. - 1 ) 3 . 0 X 10-3'

1 1 X 10-4 1 . 1 X 10-4 1.5 X l O - - J I :I x 1 0 - 0 l . ( i X 10-1 I 7 X 10-3 4 1 x 10-1 1 1 x 10-2'i X : ~ X I O - I~. : ~ x I o - ~ , ' 2 . 3 x 10-1 1.8 x 1 x 10-4 , , R X 10-1 . 2 X IO-' 1 X 10-1 , . ,

Calculated on the basis of the exchange of 4 CO's (Fig. * After exchange of the 4 labile CO's, the 5th CO equilibrated in about 3 hr. a t 50". Calculated assuming a dissociative process. O' Reaction is second order so ktrilc is in 1 . mole-', sec-l. Appreciable decomposition noted. f Some decomposition noted. Mmoles/l. of dissolved Total mmoles of CO in enclosed system. CO. 1).

Q

RATESO F

co

Compound KhP(CO)ICI?

Rh(P(CsHs),)?COCl Ptz(CO)nCl4

TABLE 11 EXCHANGE IYITH SOME S Q U A R E METALCARBOSYL HALIDES

PLAKAR

Concentration (mmole/l.) CarTemp., Exchange bonyl (CO).l* (CO)th Solvent OC. ratec 1C.7 2 . 4 2.1 Toluene 0 . 0 Instantnneous 14.2 1 . 1 0 . D O Chloro0 . 0 Instantaform neous 15.0 0.7a . 5 5 Chloro-20 Instantaform neous 18 0 1 , 2 . 5 4 Benzene 25 Instantanerms

Mmoles/l. of dissolved CO. * Total mmolcs o f CO Exchange complete in less t h a n 2 in enclosed system. min.

>> Fe(CO)4X2>f i l r ~ ( C O ) ~ XC5H5Fe(C0)2X > (2). The rapid rate of exchange for the square complexes may suggest a low energy bimolecular displacement path. Unfortunately, the exchange was much too fast to permit kinetic studies by this technique, so that there is no information on the reaction process. The slow exchange of C5HbFe(CO)2X may indicate that these compounds behave more like six-coordinated systems than sterically accessible distorted tetrahedra. 0ctahedral M eta1 Carbonyl Halides.-T hree definite conclusions can be drawn from the exchange studies on PyIn(CO)5X: (1) one CO exchanges more slowly than do the other four, (2) the rate of CO exchange does not depend on the concentration of CO and ( 3 ) the rate of CO exchange does depend on ligand X . That four CO's exchange more rapidly than does the fifth is clearly shown in Fig. 1. One possible explanation for this is that the Mn-C bond trans to X is stronger than the M-C bond trans to CO. This may result from the greater amount of a-bonding of CO compared to X. In de octahedral systems of this type, there is back donation of the d,,, d,, and d,, pairs of electrons via a-bonding into vacated p orbitals of the carbonyl carbons, e.g. AI = C=O. Because of the geometry of these orbitals, ligands trans to each other compete for the same sets of d orbitals. Therefore, the CO trans to X is in competition

CARBON MONOXIDE EXCHANGE WITH METALCARBONYL HALIDES

Feb. 5 , 19til

527

with X and as a result is more n-bonded than i t would be if in competition with CO for the dorbital electrons. That there are four reactive CO’s in these systems is in agreement with the recent observations of Abel and Wilkinson.9 They find that the reaction between Mn(C0)5X and excess L (where L = amines, phosphines and arsines) takes place as

co

oc

-co

/‘An