Sulfoxide carbon-sulfur bond activation

J Am Chem Soc. 2005 Mar 30;127(12):4180-1. doi: 10.1021/ja050160g.

Abstract

The alkynylsulfoxide, TMSCCSO(p-tolyl) (TMS = trimethylsilyl, tolyl = C6H4Me), undergoes reaction with (eta5-C5H5)Co(PPh3)2 at room temperature to give the cobaltosulfoxide complex, (C5H5)Co(PPh3)(eta1-CCTMS)[eta1-(S)-SO(p-tolyl)], which was characterized by X-ray crystallography. Exposure of this cobaltosulfoxide complex to oxygen gas leads to the formation of the corresponding metallosulfone complex, (C5H5)Co(PPh3)(eta1-CCTMS)[eta1-(S)-SO2(p-tolyl)], which was characterized by X-ray crystallography. Alternatively, in solution at room temperature, the metallosulfoxide is converted to a 1:4 mixture of the equatorial-equatorial and equatorial-axial bridging cobalt-thiolato dimers, {(C5H5)Co[mu-S(p-tolyl)]}2, respectively. The equatorial-equatorial isomer was characterized by X-ray crystallography.