Ruthenium Complexes of a Triphosphorus-Coordinating Pincer Ligand: Ru-P Ligand-Substituent Exchange Reactions Driven by Large Variations of Bond Energies

Inorg Chem. 2023 Mar 20;62(11):4525-4532. doi: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.2c04416. Epub 2023 Mar 7.

Abstract

The reaction of [(p-cymene)RuCl2]2 with the triphosphine ligand bis(2-di-tert-butylphosphinophenyl)phosphine (tBuPHPP) results in an unusual exchange reaction in which a chloride ligand and a phosphorus-bound H atom are exchanged ("H-P/Ru-Cl exchange") to give the (chlorophosphine)ruthenium hydride complex (tBuPClPP)RuHCl [1Cl-HCl; tBuPClPP = bis(2-di-tert-butylphosphinophenyl)chlorophosphine]. Density functional theory calculations indicate that the presumed initial product of metalation, (tBuPHPP)RuCl2 (1H-Cl2), undergoes an H-P/Ru-Cl exchange via sequential P-to-Ru α-H migration to give the intermediate (tBuPPP)RuHCl2, followed by Ru-to-P α-Cl migration to give the observed product 1Cl-HCl (crystallographically characterized). Dehydrochlorination of 1Cl-HCl under a H2 atmosphere gives (tBuPClPP)RuH4 (1Cl-H4), which then can undergo a second dehydrochlorination and addition of H2 to give (tBuPHPP)RuH4 (1H-H4). This reaction may proceed via the reverse of the intramolecular exchange by 1H-Cl2, i.e., loss of H2 from 1Cl-H4 to give 1Cl-H2, which could undergo Cl-P/Ru-H exchange to give (tBuPHPP)RuHCl (1H-HCl). Accordingly, the thermodynamics of Cl-P/Ru-H exchange are found to be highly dependent on the nature of the ancillary anionic ligand (H or Cl), which is not directly involved in the exchange. The origin of this thermodynamic dependence can be explained in terms of the high stability of complexes (RPXPP)RuHCl (X = H, Cl; R = Me, tBu), in which the hydride is approximately trans to a vacant coordination site and the central phosphine group is approximately trans to the weak-trans-influence chloride ligand. This conclusion has general implications for five-coordinate d6 complexes, both pincer- and nonpincer-ligated.