The 2,6-diisocyanoazulene motif: synthesis and efficient mono- and heterobimetallic complexation with controlled orientation of the azulenic dipole

J Am Chem Soc. 2006 Feb 22;128(7):2300-9. doi: 10.1021/ja053933+.

Abstract

Synthesis of the remarkably air- and thermally stable 2,6-diisocyano-1,3-diethoxycarbonylazulene linker from 2-amino-1,3-diethoxycarbonylazulene in 57% cumulative yield was developed. Incorporation of the ester "arms" in the design of this first diisocyanoazulene bridge permitted fully controlled stepwise installation and complexation of its isocyano junction groups. The -CO(2)Et arms in 2,6-diformamido-1,3-diethoxycarbonylazulene effectively suppress the rate of dehydration of its 2-NHCHO end relative to that of the 6-NHCHO end leading to practically exclusive formation of 6-isocyano-2-formamido-1,3-diethoxycarbonylazulene upon treatment of the above diformamide with an equimolar amount of POCl(3). This crystallographically characterized 6-isocyano-2-formamidoazulene derivative was employed to access mono- and heterobimetallic complexes of the 2,6-diisocyanoazulene scaffold with controlled orientation of the azulenic dipole. A complete series of monometallic, homobimetallic, and isomeric heterobimetallic ([M] = M(CO)(5), M = Cr and/or W) complexes of the 2,6-diisocyanoazulene motif was isolated and studied by a variety of techniques, including X-ray crystallography. The metal-to-bridge charge transfer in mono- and dinuclear adducts of 2,6-diisocyanoazulene, the assignment of which was corroborated by time-dependent density functional theory calculations, occurs at a dramatically lower energy as compared to the analogous systems featuring the 1,4-diisocyanobenzene scaffold. Moreover, the metal-to-diisocyanide charge transfer exhibits a substantially greater red shift upon binucleation of the mononuclear [M(CO)(5)] adducts of the nonbenzenoid 2,6-diisocyanoazulene linker versus the 1,4-diisocyanobenzene bridge.