Comparison of the Bonding of Benzene and C60 to a Metal Cluster: Ru3(CO)9(μ3-η2,η 2,η2-C6H6) and Ru3(CO)9(μ3-η2,η2,η2-C60)

被引:0
|
作者
Matthew A. Lynn
Dennis L. Lichtenberger
机构
[1] The University of Arizona,Department of Chemistry
来源
Journal of Cluster Science | 2000年 / 11卷
关键词
metal cluster; fullerene; ruthenium; electronic structure; molecular orbital;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The electron distributions and bonding in Ru3(CO)9(μ3-η2,η2,η2-C6H6) and Ru3(CO)9(μ3-η2,η2,η2-C60) are examined via electronic structure calculations in order to compare the nature of ligation of benzene and buckminsterfullerene to the common Ru3(CO)9 inorganic cluster. A fragment orbital approach, which is aided by the relatively high symmetry that these molecules possess, reveals important features of the electronic structures of these two systems. Reported crystal structures show that both benzene and C60 are geometrically distorted when bound to the metal cluster fragment, and our ab initio calculations indicate that the energies of these distortions are similar. The experimental Ru–Cfullerene bond lengths are shorter than the corresponding Ru–Cbenzene distances and the Ru–Ru bond lengths are longer in the fullerene-bound cluster than for the benzene-ligated cluster. Also, the carbonyl stretching frequencies are slightly higher for Ru3(CO)9(μ3-η2,η2,η2-C60) than for Ru3(CO)9(μ3-η2,η2,η2-C6H6). As a whole, these observations suggest that electron density is being pulled away from the metal centers and CO ligands to form stronger Ru–Cfullerene than Ru–Cbenzene bonds. Fenske-Hall molecular orbital calculations show that an important interaction is donation of electron density in the metal–metal bonds to empty orbitals of C60 and C6H6. Bonds to the metal cluster that result from this interaction are the second highest occupied orbitals of both systems. A larger amount of density is donated to C60 than to C6H6, thus accounting for the longer metal–metal bonds in the fullerene-bound cluster. The principal metal–arene bonding modes are the same in both systems, but the more band-like electronic structure of the fullerene (i.e., the greater number density of donor and acceptor orbitals in a given energy region) as compared to C6H6 permits a greater degree of electron flow and stronger bonding between the Ru3(CO)9 and C60 fragments. Of significance to the reduction chemistry of M3(CO)9(μ3-η2,η2,η2-C60) molecules, the HOMO is largely localized on the metal–carbonyl fragment and the LUMO is largely localized on the C60 portion of the molecule. The localized C60 character of the LUMO is consistent with the similarity of the first two reductions of this class of molecules to the first two reductions of free C60. The set of orbitals above the LUMO shows partial delocalization (in an antibonding sense) to the metal fragment, thus accounting for the relative ease of the third reduction of this class of molecules compared to the third reduction of free C60.
引用
收藏
页码:169 / 188
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The Thermolysis of Ru3(CO)12 with Carboxylic Acids Revisited: Stepwise Assembly of Ru2 to Ru6 Cluster Frameworks
    Yang, Jindou D.
    Wang, Xian
    Song, Chengxin X.
    Zhang, Weiqiang Q.
    Zhang, Guofang F.
    Gao, Ziwei
    Fan, Juan
    Sun, Huaming M.
    CHEMISTRYSELECT, 2016, 1 (17): : 5397 - 5403
  • [32] Corannulene "hub" carbon coordination by [Ru2{O2C(3,5-CF3)2C6H3}2(CO)5]
    Petrukhina, Marina A.
    Sevryugina, Yulia
    Rogachev, Andrey Yu.
    Jackson, Edward A.
    Scott, Lawrence T.
    ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE-INTERNATIONAL EDITION, 2006, 45 (43) : 7208 - 7210
  • [33] Reactions of the clusters [Os3(CO)10(MeCN)2)] and [Ru3(CO)12] with (2-aminophenyl)phosphine P(2-NH2C6H4)H2.: A comparison of the reactivity of amino and phosphino groups with clusters
    Arce, AJ
    Machado, R
    De Sanctis, Y
    González, T
    Atencio, R
    Deeming, AJ
    INORGANICA CHIMICA ACTA, 2003, 344 : 123 - 127
  • [34] Synthesis and X-ray structure of Ru3(CO)6(μ2-CO)(μ2-AsPh2)(μ-O=C-C12H17), a first example of a CO insertion reaction to a cluster-bound hydrocarbon
    bin Shawkataly, O
    Puvanesvary, K
    Fun, HK
    Sivakumar, K
    JOURNAL OF ORGANOMETALLIC CHEMISTRY, 1998, 565 (1-2) : 267 - 270
  • [35] Reactions of tridentate phosphine ligand [HC(PPh(2))(3)] with metal carbonyl clusters HRuCo3(CO)(12) and H3Ru3Co(CO)(12): Synthesis and crystal structures of HRuCo3(CO)(9)[HC(PPh(2))(3)] and H3Ru3Co(CO)(9) [HC(PPh(2))(3)]center dot 1/2C(6)H(14)
    Kakkonen, HJ
    Ahlgren, M
    Pursiainen, J
    Pakkanen, TA
    JOURNAL OF ORGANOMETALLIC CHEMISTRY, 1996, 507 (1-2) : 147 - 155
  • [36] Reaction between [Ru3(CO)10(μ-dppm)] (dppm = Ph2PCH2PPh2) and Te2(C6H4OEt-4)2:: X-ray crystal structure of [Ru2(CO)6{μ-C6H4PPh(CH2)PPh}]
    Azam, KA
    Bhowmick, M
    Hossain, GMG
    Kabir, SE
    Kundu, K
    Abdul Malik, KM
    Perven, S
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL CRYSTALLOGRAPHY, 2001, 31 (01) : 63 - 68
  • [37] Reaction between [Ru3(CO)10(μ-dppm)] (dppm = Ph2PCH2PPh2) and Te2(C6H4OEt-4)2: X-ray crystal structure of [Ru2(CO)6{μ-C6H4PPh(CH2)PPh}]
    Kazi A. Azam
    Mohitosh Bhowmick
    Golam Mohammad Golzar Hossain
    Shariff E. Kabir
    Kalipada Kundu
    Khalifa Mohammad Abdul Malik
    Salina Perven
    Journal of Chemical Crystallography, 2001, 31 : 63 - 68
  • [38] Activation of carbon disulfide on triruthenium clusters:: Synthesis and X-ray crystal structure analysis of [RU3(CO)5(μ-H)2(μ-PCy2)(μ-Ph2PCH2PPh2){μ-η2-PCy2C(S)}(μ3-S)] and [Ru3(CO)5(CS)(μ-H)(μ-PtBu2)(μ-PCy2)2(μ3-S)]
    Böttcher, HC
    Graf, M
    Merzweiler, K
    Wagner, C
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR ANORGANISCHE UND ALLGEMEINE CHEMIE, 2001, 627 (12): : 2657 - 2662
  • [39] Synthesis, structure and electrochemistry of triruthenium cluster complex [Ru3(μ3-O)(μ-CH3CO2)6(py)2(PPh2py)](PF6)•CH2Cl2
    Chen, JL
    Zhang, LY
    Chen, ZN
    CHINESE JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL CHEMISTRY, 2004, 23 (09) : 1022 - 1026
  • [40] Unusual coupling of diynes and CO on an Ru3-cluster:: crystal structure of Ru3{μ3CPhCC(O)C(SiMe3)C(CCSiMe3)CCPh}(μ-dppm)(μ-CO)(CO)6
    Bruce, MI
    Zaitseva, NN
    Skelton, BW
    White, AH
    RUSSIAN CHEMICAL BULLETIN, 1998, 47 (05) : 983 - 987