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Phosphenium Hydride Reduction of [(cod)MX<sub>2</sub>] (M = Pd, Pt; X = Cl, Br): Snapshots on the Way to Phosphenium Metal(0) Halides and Synthesis of Metal Nanoparticles
The
outcome of the reduction of [(cod)ÂPtX<sub>2</sub>] (X = Cl,
Br; cod = 1,5-cyclooctadiene) with N-heterocyclic phosphenium hydrides <sup>R</sup>NHP–H depends strongly on the steric demand of the <i>N</i>-aryl group R and the nature of X. Reaction of [(cod)ÂPtCl<sub>2</sub>] with <sup>Dipp</sup>NHP–H featuring bulky N-Dipp
groups produced an unprecedented monomeric phosphenium metal(0) halide
[(<sup>Dipp</sup>NHP)Â(<sup>Dipp</sup>NHP–H)ÂPtCl] stabilized
by a single phosphine ligand. The phosphenium unit exhibits a pyramidal
coordination geometry at the phosphorus atom and may according to
DFT calculations be classified as a Z-type ligand. In contrast, reaction
of [(cod)ÂPtBr<sub>2</sub>] with the sterically less protected <sup>Mes</sup>NHP–H afforded a mixture of donor-ligand free oligonuclear
complexes [{(<sup>Mes</sup>NHP)ÂPtBr}<sub><i>n</i></sub>]
(<i>n</i> = 2, 3), which are structural analogues of known
palladium complexes with μ<sub>2</sub>-bridging phosphenium
units. All reductions studied proceed via spectroscopically detectable
intermediates, several of which could be unambiguously identified
by means of multinuclear (<sup>1</sup>H, <sup>31</sup>P, <sup>195</sup>Pt) NMR spectroscopy and computational studies. The experimental
findings reveal that the phosphenium hydrides in these multistep processes
adopt a dual function as ligands and hydride transfer reagents. The
preference for the observed intricate pathways over seemingly simpler
ligand exchange processes is presumably due to kinetic reasons. The
attempt to exchange the bulky phosphine ligand in [(<sup>Dipp</sup>NHP)Â(<sup>Dipp</sup>NHP–H)ÂPtCl] by Me<sub>3</sub>P resulted
in an unexpected isomerization to a platinum(0) chlorophosphine complex
via a formal chloride migration from platinum to phosphorus, which
accentuates the electrophilic nature of the phosphenium ligand. Phosphenium
metal(0) halides of platinum further show a surprising thermal stability,
whereas the palladium complexes easily disintegrate upon gentle heating
in dimethyl sulfoxide to yield metal nanoparticles, which were characterized
by TEM and XRD studies