Preparation of Metal Corbonyls
Preparation of Metal Corbonyls
Preparation of Metal Corbonyls
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Some metal carbonyls are prepared by the reduction of metal halides in the presence of high pressures of carbon monoxide under pressure. A variety of reducing agents are employed, including copper, aluminum, hydrogen, as well as metal alkyls such as triethylaluminum. Illustrative is the formation of chromium hexacarbonyl from anhydrouschromium(III) chloride in benzene with aluminum as a reducing agent, and aluminum chloride as the catalyst:[27] CrCl3 + Al + 6 CO Cr(CO)6 + AlCl3 The use of metal alkyls, e.g. triethylaluminium and diethylzinc as the reducing agent leads to the oxidative coupling of the alkyl radical to the dimer: WCl6 + 6 CO + 2 Al(C2H5)3 W(CO)6 + 2 AlCl3 + 3 C4H10 Tungsten, molybdenum, manganese, and rhodium salts may be reduced with lithium aluminum hydride. Vanadium hexacarbonyl is prepared with sodium as a reducing agent inchelating solvents such as diglyme.[7] VCl3 + 4 Na + 6 CO 2 diglyme Na(diglyme)2[V(CO)6] + 3NaCl [V(CO)6] + H+ H[V(CO)6] 1/2 H2 + V(CO)6 In aqueous phase nickel or cobalt salts can be reduced, for example, by sodium dithionite. In the presence of
carbon monoxide, cobalt salts are quantitatively converted to the tetracarbonylcobalt(-1) anion:[7] Co2+ + 1.5 S2O42 + 6 OH + 4 CO Co(CO)4 + 3 SO32 + 3H2O Some metal carbonyls are prepared using CO as the reducing agent. In this way, Hieber and Fuchs first prepared dirhenium decacarbonyl from the oxide:[29] Re2O7 + 17 CO Re2(CO)10 + 7 CO2 If metal oxides are used carbon dioxide is formed as a reaction product. In the reduction of metal chlorides with carbon monoxide phosgene is formed, as in the preparation ofosmium carbonyl chloride from the chloride salts.[26] Carbon monoxide is also suitable for the reduction of sulfides, where carbonyl sulfide is the byproduct.
the metal and carbon monoxide. 2 Fe(CO)5 Fe2(CO)9 + CO The thermal decomposition of triosmium dodecacarbonyl (Os3(CO)12) provides highernuclear osmium carbonyl clusters such as Os4(CO)13, Os6(CO)18 up to Os8(CO)23.[7] Mixed ligand carbonyls of ruthenium, osmium, rhodium, and iridium are often generated by abstraction of CO from solvents such as dimethylformamide (DMF)and 2methothol Typical is the synthesis of IrCl(CO)(PPh3)2 from the reaction of iridium(III)chloride and triphenylphosphie in boiling DMF solution.
Salt metathesis
Salt metathesis reaction of for example KCo(CO)4 with [Ru(CO)3Cl2]2 leads selectively to mixed-metal carbonyls such as RuCo2(CO)11.[32] KCo(CO)4 + [Ru(CO)3Cl2]2 2 RuCo2(CO)11 + 4 KCl
The synthesis of ionic carbonyl complexes is possible by oxidation or reduction of the neutral complexes. Anionic metal carbonylates can be obtained for example by reduction of dinuclear complexes with sodium. A familiar example is the sodium salt of iron tetracarbonylate (Na2Fe(CO)4,Collman's reagent), which is used in organic synthesis.[33] The cationic hexacarbonyl salts of manganese, technetium and rhenium can be prepared from the carbonyl halides under carbon monoxide pressure by reaction with a Lewis acid. Mn(CO)5Cl + AlCl3 + CO Mn(CO)6+AlCl4 The use of strong acids succeeded in preparing gold carbonyl cations such as [Au(CO)2]+, which is used as a catalyst for the carbonylation of olefins.[34] The cationic platinum carbonyl complex [Pt(CO)4]+ can be prepared by working in so-called super acids such as antimony pentafluoride