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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Approaching a “naked” boryl anion: amide metathesis as a route to calcium, strontium, and potassium boryl complexes
Simon AldridgeM. ÁNgeles FuentesAndrey V. ProtchenkoPetra VaskoPetra VaskoJamie HicksDragoslav Vidovicsubject
DimerPotassiumchemistry.chemical_elementBoron Chemistry010402 general chemistryMetathesis01 natural sciencesCatalysischemistry.chemical_compoundAmidestructural studiesbooriBoronStrontiumPotassium amide010405 organic chemistryChemistryCommunicationAtoms in moleculesborylkompleksiyhdisteetGeneral MedicineGeneral ChemistryCommunications0104 chemical sciencesCrystallographys-block chemistryamiditatoms in moleculesborondescription
Abstract Amide metathesis has been used to generate the first structurally characterized boryl complexes of calcium and strontium, {(Me3Si)2N}M{B(NDippCH)2}(thf)n (M=Ca, n=2; M=Sr, n=3), through the reactions of the corresponding bis(amides), M{N(SiMe3)2}2(thf)2, with (thf)2Li‐ {B(NDippCH)2}. Most notably, this approach can also be applied to the analogous potassium amide K{N(SiMe3)2}, leading to the formation of the solvent‐free borylpotassium dimer [K{B(NDippCH)2}]2, which is stable in the solid state at room temperature for extended periods (48 h). A dimeric structure has been determined crystallographically in which the K+ cations interact weakly with both the ipso‐carbons of the flanking Dipp groups and the boron centres of the diazaborolyl heterocycles, with K⋅⋅⋅B distances of >3.1 Å. These structural features, together with atoms in molecules (QTAIM) calculations imply that the boron‐containing fragment closely approaches a limiting description as a “free” boryl anion in the condensed phase.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-12-09 |