Transition metal alkene complex

In organometallic chemistry, a transition metal alkene complex is a coordination compound containing one or more alkene ligands. The inventory is large.[1] Such compounds are intermediates in many catalytic reactions that convert alkenes to other organic products.[2]

Monoalkenes

The simplest monoalkene is ethene. Many complexes of ethene are known, including Zeise's salt (see figure), Rh2Cl2(C2H4)4, Cp*2Ti(C2H4), and the homoleptic Ni(C2H4)3. Substituted monoalkene include the cyclic cyclooctene, as found in chlorobis(cyclooctene)rhodium dimer. Alkenes with electron-withdrawing groups commonly bind strongly to low-valent metals. Examples of such ligands are TCNE, tetrafluoroethylene, maleic anhydride, and esters of fumaric acid. These acceptors form adducts with many zero-valent metals.[1]

Dienes, trienes, polyenes, keto-alkenes, and other complicated alkene ligands

Butadiene, cyclooctadiene, and norbornadiene are well-studied chelating agents. Trienes and even some tetraenes can bind to metals through several adjacent carbon centers. Common examples of such ligands are cycloheptatriene and cyclooctatetraene. The bonding is often denoted using the hapticity formalism. Keto-alkenes are tetrahapto ligands that stabilize highly unsaturated low valent metals as found in (benzylideneacetone)iron tricarbonyl and tris(dibenzylideneacetone)dipalladium(0).

Bonding

Structure of (acac)Rh(C2H4)(C2F4), distances (red) in picometers.[3]

The bonding between alkenes and transition metals is described by the Dewar–Chatt–Duncanson model, which involves donation of electrons in the pi-orbital on the alkene to empty orbitals on the metal. This interaction is reinforced by back bonding that entails sharing of electrons in other metal orbitals into the empty pi-antibonding level on the alkene. Early metals of low oxidation state (Ti(II), Zr(II), Nb(III) etc.) are strong pi donors, and their alkene complexes are often described as metallacyclopropanes. Treatment of such species with acids gives the alkanes. Late metals (Ir(I), Pt(II)), which are poorer pi-donors, tend to engage the alkene as a Lewis acidLewis base interaction. Similarly, C2F4 is a stronger pi-acceptor than C2H4, as reflected in metal-carbon bond distances.[3]

Rotational barrier

The barrier for the rotation of the alkene about the M-centroid vector is a measure of the strength of the M-alkene pi-bond. Low symmetry complexes are suitable for analysis of these rotational barriers associated with the metal-ethene bond.In CpRh(C2H4)(C2F4), the ethene ligand is observed to rotate with a barrier near 12 kcal/mol but no rotation is observed for about the Rh-C2F4 bond.[4]

Reactions and applications

Alkene ligands lose much of their unsaturated character upon complexation. Most famously, the alkene ligand undergoes migratory insertion, wherein it is attacked intramolecularly by alkyl and hydride ligands to form new alkyl complexes. Cationic alkene complexes are susceptible to attack by nucleophiles.[1]

Catalysis

Metal alkene complexes are intermediates in many or most transition metal catalyzed reactions of alkenes: polymerization., hydrogenation, hydroformylation, and many other reactions.[5]

The mechanism of the Wacker process involves Pd-alkene complex intermediates.
The mechanism of the Wacker process involves Pd-alkene complex intermediates.

Separations

Since alkenes are mainly produced as mixtures with alkanes, the separation of alkanes and alkenes is of commercial interest. Separation technologies often rely on facilitated transport membranes containing Ag+ or Cu+ salts that reversibly bind alkenes.[6]

In argentation chromatography, stationary phases that contain silver salts are used to analyze organic compounds on the basis of the number and type of alkene (olefin) groups. This methodology is commonly employed for the analysis of the unsaturated content in fats and fatty acids.[7]

Natural occurrence

Metal-alkene complexes are uncommon in nature, with one exception. Ethene affects the ripening of fruit and flowers by complexation to a Cu(I) center in a transcription factor.[8]

References

  1. Elschenbroich, C. ”Organometallics” (2006) Wiley-VCH: Weinheim. ISBN 3-527-29390-6
  2. John Hartwig. Organotransition Metal Chemistry: From Bonding to Catalysis. University Science Books. ISBN 978-1-891389-53-5.
  3. Evans, J. A.; Russell, D. R. (1971). "The Crystal Structures of Ethylene and Tetrafluoroethylene Complexes of Rhodium(I)". Journal of the Chemical Society D: Chemical Communications (4): 197. doi:10.1039/C29710000197.
  4. Cramer, Richard; Kline, Jules B.; Roberts, John D. (1969). "Bond Character and Conformational Equilibration of Ethylene- and Tetrafluoroethylenerhodium Complexes from Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectra". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 91 (10): 2519–2524. doi:10.1021/ja01038a021.
  5. Piet W. N. M. van Leeuwen "Homogeneous Catalysis: Understanding the Art", 2004, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. ISBN 1-4020-2000-7
  6. Azhin, Maryam; Kaghazchi, Tahereh; Rahmani, Mohammad (2008). "A Review on Olefin/Paraffin Separation Using Reversible Chemical Complexation technology". Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry. 14 (5): 622–638. doi:10.1016/j.jiec.2008.04.014.
  7. Boryana Nikolova-Damyanova. "Principles of Silver Ion Complexation with Double Bonds".
  8. Jose M. Alonso, Anna N. Stepanova "The Ethylene Signaling Pathway" Science 2004, Vol. 306, pp. 1513-1515. doi:10.1126/science.1104812
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