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    Active Nature of Primary Amines during Thermal Decomposition of Nickel Dithiocarbamates to Nickel Sulfide Nanoparticles

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    Although [Ni­(S<sub>2</sub>CNBu<sup>i</sup><sub>2</sub>)<sub>2</sub>] is stable at high temperatures in a range of solvents, solvothermal decomposition occurs at 145 °C in oleylamine to give pure NiS nanoparticles, while in <i>n</i>-hexylamine at 120 °C a mixture of Ni<sub>3</sub>S<sub>4</sub> (polydymite) and NiS results. A combined experimental and theoretical study gives mechanistic insight into the decomposition process and can be used to account for the observed differences. Upon dissolution in the primary amine, octahedral <i>trans-</i>[Ni­(S<sub>2</sub>CNBu<sup>i</sup><sub>2</sub>)<sub>2</sub>(RNH<sub>2</sub>)<sub>2</sub>] result as shown by <i>in situ</i> XANES and EXAFS and confirmed by DFT calculations. Heating to 90–100 °C leads to changes consistent with the formation of amide-exchange products, [Ni­(S<sub>2</sub>CNBu<sup>i</sup><sub>2</sub>)­{S<sub>2</sub>CN­(H)­R}] and/or [Ni­{S<sub>2</sub>CN­(H)­R}<sub>2</sub>]. DFT modeling shows that exchange occurs via nucleophilic attack of the primary amine at the backbone carbon of the dithiocarbamate ligand(s). With hexylamine, amide-exchange is facile and significant amounts of [Ni­{S<sub>2</sub>CN­(H)­Hex}<sub>2</sub>] are formed prior to decomposition, but with oleylamine, exchange is slower and [Ni­(S<sub>2</sub>CNBu<sup>i</sup><sub>2</sub>)­{S<sub>2</sub>CN­(H)­Oleyl}] is the active reaction component. The primary amine dithiocarbamate complexes decompose rapidly at ca. 100 °C to afford nickel sulfides, even in the absence of primary amine, as shown from thermal decomposition studies of [Ni­{S<sub>2</sub>CN­(H)­Hex}<sub>2</sub>]. DFT modeling of [Ni­{S<sub>2</sub>CN­(H)­R}<sub>2</sub>] shows that proton migration from nitrogen to sulfur leads to formation of a dithiocarbimate (S<sub>2</sub>CNR) which loses isothiocyanate (RNCS) to give dimeric nickel thiolate complexes [Ni­{S<sub>2</sub>CN­(H)­R}­(μ-SH)]<sub>2</sub>. These intermediates can either lose dithiocarbamate(s) or extrude further isothiocyanate to afford (probably amine-stabilized) nickel thiolate building blocks, which aggregate to give the observed nickel sulfide nanoparticles. Decomposition of the single or double amide-exchange products can be differentiated, and thus it is the different rates of amide-exchange that account primarily for the formation of the observed nanoparticulate nickel sulfides
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