Cobalt-mediated direct and selective aromatic thiolation in the complex [CoIII(o-SC6H4N=C5H4N) 2]ClO4. Synthesis,spectroscopic characterisation and electron-transfer properties

Santra, Bidyut Kumar ; Lahiri, Goutam Kumar (1997) Cobalt-mediated direct and selective aromatic thiolation in the complex [CoIII(o-SC6H4N=C5H4N) 2]ClO4. Synthesis,spectroscopic characterisation and electron-transfer properties Journal of the Chemical Society, Dalton Transactions (11). pp. 1883-1888. ISSN 1472-7773

Full text not available from this repository.

Official URL: http://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/1997...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/A700018I

Abstract

The reaction of K[SC(S)OR] (R = Me, Et, Pr n , Pr i , Bu n , Bu i or CH 2 Ph) with the complex [Co II L 3 ][ClO 4 ] 2 .H 2 O 1 [L = phenyl(2-pyridyl)diazene, C 6 H 5 N NC 5 H 4 N] in boiling dimethylformamide resulted in [Co III L' 2 ]ClO 4 2 (L' = o-SC 6 H 4 N NC 5 H 4 N). In complex 2 the o-carbon-hydrogen bond of the pendant phenyl ring of both the parent ligands L has been selectively and directly thiolated via carbon-sulfur bond cleavage of the dithiocarbonate. During the thiolation the metal ion is oxidised from the starting Co II in 1 to Co III in the final product 2. The reaction is highly sensitive to the nature of the solvent used, taking place only in those having high boiling points and relative permittivities. Its rate is dependent on the nature of the R group present in the thiolating agent, following the order Me ≈ Et > Pr n > Bu n > Pr i > Bu i ≫benzyl. A meridional configuration (cis-trans-cis with respect to the sulfur, azo and pyridine nitrogens respectively) has been established by 1 H and 13 C NMR spectroscopy. The complex exhibits reversible Co III ⇋Co II reduction at -0.135 V and four ligand-based azo (N N) reductions at -0.51 (one electron) and at -1.175 V (simultaneous three-electron reduction) respectively versus saturated calomel electrode. The oxidation of the co-ordinated thiol group occurs at 0.90 V.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Royal Society of Chemistry.
ID Code:88430
Deposited On:28 Mar 2012 09:38
Last Modified:28 Mar 2012 09:38

Repository Staff Only: item control page