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2-Organometallic Chemistry

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Organometallic compounds & Catalysis

~2000 billion dollars industry


Books to Refer:
Inorganic Chemistry by James E. Huheey
Advanced Inorganic Chemistry: Cotton and Wilkinson

Prof. Madhab Chandra Das


Department of Chemistry
High Pressure Lab (Ground Floor)
IIT Kharagpur
Ph: 03222-282894
Email: mcdas@chem.iitkgp.ac.in
Transition metal organometallic compounds & Catalysis

Which one is organometallic? Ni(CO)4 or NaCN ?

One metal-carbon bond should be present


(C: part of org gr or attached to H).

CH3
R3P CO
Re
PR3
CO

The term “organometallic” is rather loosely defined


Metals in Low Oxidation States

• In low oxidation states, the electron density


on the metal ion is very high.
• To stabilize low oxidation states, we require
ligands, which can simultaneously bind the
metal center and also withdraw electron
density from it.

[Ni(CO)4], [Fe(CO)5], [Cr(CO)6], [Mn2(CO)10],


[Co2(CO)8], Na2[Fe(CO)4], Na[Mn(CO)5]
CO does the job (already discussed in Chemical Bonding Part-1a)
LCAO
vacant *2py, *2pz

+ + 

O C M filled hybrid d orbitals

+
  +
2 nb e pairs or lp
(MOT)
 orbital (nb)C serves as a donor to a metal atom (M)
&
M to CO pi backbonding
Simple representation

 donor +  acceptor
18 electron rule (EAN Rule)
1920 British Chemist Sidgwick
Organic compounds – Octet rule

Organometallic – 18 electron rule (EAN rule for next inert gas)

•predicting stabilities and structures of organometallic compounds

Counting electrons: 1) Oxidation state method √


2) Neutral atom method
Counting the number of electrons

Determine the oxidation state of the transition metal center(s)


To do this one must:
a) note any overall charge on the metal complex
b) know the charges of the ligands bound to the metal
center
c) know the number of electrons being donated to the metal
center from each ligand
2) Add up the electron counts for the metal center and ligands
Counting the number of electrons
Ligand Name Bonding Type Formal Electrons
Charge donated
Molecular Hydrogen: H2 H 0 2
M
H
Hydride H- M-H -1 2

Halide X- M-X -1 2

Amine, phosphine, M-NR3 M-PR3 0 2


arsine: NR3, PR3, AsR3

Carbonyl: CO M C O 0 2

Alkyl , Aryl M-CR M-Ph -1 2

Alkene M 0 2
H2C CH2

M= Metal
valance cell e of

Ph3P PPh3
Rh Rh is s1d8 = 9e
Ph3P Cl
since Cl is -1, Rh is +1 (the complex is neutral)

9e - 1e + 8e = 16e 4 ligands x 2e each = 8e

therefore coordinately unsaturated

DIY for
Zeise's salt
d d d d d d d d d s
21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29

Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu
Scandium Titanium Vanadium Chromium Manganese Iron Cobalt Nickel Copper

39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47

Y Zr Nb Mo Tc Ru Rh Pd Ag
Yttrium Zirconium Niobium Molybdenum Technetium Ruthenum Rhodium Palladium Silver

57 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79

La Hf Ta W Re Os Ir Pt Au
Lanthanum Hafnium Tantalum Tungsten Rhenium Osmium Iridium Platinum Gold

Early Transition Middle Transition Late Transition


Metals Metals Metals
16e and sub-16e 18e 16e and sub-16e
configurations configurations configurations
are common are common are common
Coordination Coordination Coordination
geometries geometries geometries
higher than 6 of 6 are common of 5 or lower
Catalysis

Catalyst
A+B C Catalyzed rxn
proceeding through
an intermediate

Ea

A catalyst lowers the Ea


G catalyzed
activation barrier for a
transformation, by introducing Reactants
G
a new reaction pathway.
Products

Reaction Coordinate

Heterogeneous Homogeneous
Catalysis : Why?

Synthesis of chemicals… pharmaceutical, agricultural

Catalytic converter … environmental

Biology: Enzymes

Catalytic Converter (BS-6)


How to select an efficient catalyst?
Activity: Turnover frequency (N): catalytic cycles/unit time

Large turnover frequency – efficient catalyst

Selectivity: Byproducts should be minimized

Lifetime: It is costly to replace the catalyst frequently

Cost: The acceptable cost depends upon the catalyst


lifetime and product value

Poisoning: decomposition of catalyst, absorption of


reactant/product
Coordination compounds in catalysis
Nobel Prizes

2010 Richard F. Heck, Ei-ichi Negishi, Akira Suzuki


2005 Yves Chauvin, Robert H. Grubbs and Richard R.
Schrock.
2001 KNOWLES, NOYORI, SHARPLESS
1973 WILKINSON
1963 ZIEGLER, NATTA
1918 HABER
1909 OSTWALD
Hydrogenation of Unsaturated Hydrocarbons

H H
-CH=CH- + H2  -CH-CH-

NOBEL : 1973

The most common catalyst



Wilkinson’s Catalyst, [RhCl(PPh3)3]
Wilkinson’s Catalyst (WC)

Ph3P PPh3

Rh

Cl PPh3
Chlorotris(triphenylphosphine)rhodium(I)

square planar 16 e d8 configuration


Geoffrey Wilkinson
• Born July 14, 1921, Yorkshire, England
• Ph.D from UC Berkeley studying with Glenn Seaborg
• First published compound in 1965 in Journal of the
Chemical Society - Chemical Communications
•Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1973 (shared with Ernst
Otto Fischer) for their pioneering work, performed
independently, on the chemistry of the organometallics

Organometallic compounds prepared by


Wilkinson in display at Harvard Univ.

"Advanced Inorganic Chemistry", often referred


to simply as "Cotton and Wilkinson"
Synthesis of WC
Ph3P PPh3
EtOH
RhCl3 + 3 H2O + >4 PPh3 Rh + Ph3PO
78 oC
Cl PPh3

Commercially available
Few Common Organometallic Catalytic Steps

(a) Ligand coordination and dissociation


Facile coordination of the reactant and facile loss of products.

Coordinatively unsaturated - 16-electron complexes

(b) Oxidative addition

Coordinatively unsaturated complex in a low OS undergoes a formal oxdn


by 2 units (loss of 2 e) & at the same time increases CN by 2.

Oxidation of metal by two units: Mn to Mn+2


CN of metal by two units: 4 to 6 (in general)
Oxidative addition…

X-Y X
+ X-Y LnMn+2
LnMn
LnMn Y

Ph3P Cl
Ir + H2
Ph3P CO
Vaska’s complex
(c) Insertion and/or migration
Migration of alkyl and hydride ligands

R L R
* *
L+ M CO M C
O

H CH
2
M M CH2CH3
CH2

L is generally solvents
(d) Nucleophilic attack

-
O
-
L5M CO + OH- L5M C OH L5M H
+
CO2
(d) Reductive elimination

Involves decrease in the oxidation and coordination number

Ph3P Cl
Cl Rh
Ph3P Me Ph3P CO
Rh
Ph3P COR +
CO RCOMe
Hydrogenation of Unsaturated Hydrocarbons

H H
-CH=CH- + H2  -CH-CH-

G0 = -101 kJ/mol

thermodynamically favourable but does not occur at RT and P


WC in alkene Hydrogenation: Catalytic Steps
(1) Oxidative addition
H
Ph3P PPh3 Ph3P PPh3
Rh + H2 Rh
Ph3P Cl Ph3P H
Rh+1 Cl
16 e Rh3+ 18 e
(2) Ligand Dissociation

H H
Ph3P PPh3 Ph3P
Rh Rh H + PPh3
Ph3P H Ph3P
Cl Cl
Rh3+ 18 e Rh3+ 16 e
WC in alkene Hydrogenation: Catalytic Steps
(3) Ligand Association
H H CH
Ph 3 P H H2
Ph 3 P CH 2 Ph 3 P Rh
Rh H + Rh CH 2
Ph 3 P CH 2 Cl PPh 3
Ph 3 P H
Rh3+ Cl 16 e H 2 CCl CH 2 Rh3+ 18 e
(4) Migration/Insertion (Migratory Insertion)

P h 3P
H
CHH 2 H CH2
H
P h 3P Rh CH2
Cl Rh P PChH
3
2 P h 3P
P h 3P H Rh H
H 2 CC l C H 2 P h 3P
Rh3+ 18 e Rh3+ C l 16 e
WC in alkene Hydrogenation: Catalytic Steps

(5) Ligand association

H CH2 H CH2
CH2 CH2
Ph3P Ph3P PPh3
Rh H + PPh3 Rh
Ph3P Ph3P H
Cl Cl
Rh3+ 16 e Rh3+ 18 e
WC in alkene Hydrogenation: Catalytic Steps

(6) Reductive elimination

H CH2
CH2
Ph3P PPh3 Ph3P PPh3
Rh Rh
Ph3P H Ph3P + CH3 CH3
Cl
Cl
Rh3+ 18 e Rh+1 16 e
(note: regeneration of the catalyst)
rds
L = PPh3
WC in alkene Hydrogenation: Additional Notes

Highly sensitive to the nature of the phosphine ligand


Highly selective for C=C over C=O
It is used in the selective hydrogenation of alkenes and alkynes
without affecting the functional groups like: C=O, CN, NO2, Aryl,
CO2R etc.

Applications

* Laboratory scale organic synthesis


* Production of fine chemicals
Alkene Hydrogenation & Chirality & Nobel

Chiral phosphine ligands have been developed to synthesize optically


active products.
Synthesis of L-DOPA (used in the treatment of Parkinson’s diseases)
Synthetic route was developed by Knowles & co-workers at Monsanto

Dr. William S. Knowles received Nobel prize in chemistry 2001


along with other two scientists.
Alkene Hydrogenation, Chirality & Nobel Prize

Rh(1) organometallic cat

This reaction, developed by Knowles, Vineyard, and Sabacky, was used at


Monsanto as a commercial route to the Parkinson's drug L-DOPA.
Acetic Acid
 Acetic acid is an important industrial chemical
 Over 8 million tonnes is produced all over the world
annually

vinegar

de-icing chemicals are efficient freezing-point depressants


Synthesis of Acetic Acid
The traditional synthesis uses bio-oxidation of ethanol obtained via
fermentation:
C6H12O6  2 C2H5OH + 2 CO2
C2H5OH + O2  CH3COOH + H2O
This is not a clean and efficient process! (need conc EtOH)

Industrial acetic acid synthesis:


CH3OH + CO  CH3COOH (catalyzed by a rhodium complex)

Zn/CuO
Enormous quantity of MeOH is produced commercially from syn gas: CO+ 2H2 CH3OH
Monsanto Acetic Acid Process (carbonylation of methanol)

Active/pre- catalyst: [Rh (CO)2I2]


The rkn can be initiated with any Rh salt eg RhCl3 & source of iodine (HI), the
two combining the CO to produce the active catalyst [Rh(CO)2I2]-
Recovered catalyst
OS of Rh: = +1, +3

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