Carbenes
Carbenes
Carbenes
• The concept of a double bond between transition metals and carbon constitutes one of the
most important elements in the field of organometallic chemistry
• The notion of a metal–carbon double bond was first brought forward by Fischer and Maasbol
in 1964 with the synthesis of (CO)5W=C(Ph)(OMe)
• Soon after the discovery of Fischer type complexes their chemistry was systematically explored
and they have been since well established as valuable species in organic synthesis as well as
in catalytic processes
• Schrock later prepared a number of tantalum complexes including (Np)3Ta=CH(CMe3) and (η5-
Cp)2MeTa=CH2
• Carbenes are both thermodynamically and kinetically unstable therefore forming very strong
metal-carbene bonds disfavoring dissociation
e.g. just as pramagnetic triplet :CH2 can dimerize to form diamagnetic H2C=CH2, it also binds
to a triplet LnM fragment to give a diamagnetic LnM=CH2 complex.
2a1(σ*)
a 1(dz2)
2b1(π*)
b 1(π-Cpx)
b 1(dxz) b2
b 2(dyz) a 1(σ-Csp2)
1b1(π)
a 2(dxy) a2
a 1(σ)
• Acetylides make for suitable bases due to their canonical vinylidene form and undergo
nucleophillic attack by alcohols in-situ to generate the heteroatom stabilized Fishcer carbene
complex.
Fischer carbene reactions
• Thermal decomposition of Fishcer carbenes gives rise to a set of alkene products: rearranged
monomer and the dimer.
• Oxidative cleavage of the M-C bond using CeIV, pyridine-N-oxide, DMSO or even simply O2
usually gives rise to the ketone derivative.
• In the absence of a heteroatom substituent Fischer carbenes are highly reactive and give rise
to 1,2 proton or alkyl shifts following protonation/alkylation yielding the thermodynamically
more stable metal alkene complex.
• This reaction is comparable to that of amide formation via ketone aminolysis if we replace
(CO)5M with C=O.
• Addition of unsturated nucleophillic systems such as alkenes or alkynes can lead to the
formation of metalacycles
• Metalacycles can break down to give a new carbene and new alkene in a reaction known as
alkene metathesis (discussed later)
CH3 CH3
hv (CO)4W
(CO)5W
H (-CO)
N N H
• Casey et al. have reported the photoinduced CO loss and preparation of a tetracarbonyl
tungsten-carbene-alkene chelated complex.
• This was the first reported case of a stable metal-carbene-alkene complex and was early
evidence that these complexes as well as metallacyclobutanes could be key intermediates in
metal catalysed reactions such as olefin metathesis, cyclopropanation and benzannulation.
OMe
Ph
Ph
Ph
(CO)4W (CO)4W Ph
Ph
OMe MeO
Ph Ph
OMe CO OMe Ph
(CO)5W (CO)5W +
Ph Ph Ph
H. C. Foley, L. M. Strubinger, T. S. Targos, G. L. Geoffroy, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1983, 105, 3064.
Dötz Benzannulation Reaction
CO CO
CO hv CO
OMe OMe
OC M OC M
Ph - CO Ph
OC OC
CO
I II
RL RS
CO CO
CO CO
OMe OMe
OC M OC M
Ph Ph
OC OC
RL RS RL RS
III
CO
CO
OC M OMe O OMe
OC
RL
RS RL RS
Z-IV V
CO
CO cyclisation
OC M (CO)4M OMe OMe
RL
OC
RL OMe RL RS RS
RS
E-IV VI VII
CO insertion
OMe
OMe OMe
RS
O
RL O RS HO RS
RL RL
M(CO)3 M(CO)3
VIII IX X