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Persistent carbene

A persistent carbene (also known as stable carbene) is an organic molecule whose natural resonance structure has a carbon atom with incomplete octet (a carbene), but does not exhibit the tremendous instability typically associated with such moieties. The best-known examples and by far largest subgroup are the N-heterocyclic carbenes (NHC)[1] (sometimes called Arduengo carbenes), in which nitrogen atoms flank the formal carbene.

1,3-Dimesityl-imidazol-4,5-dihydro-2-ylidene, a representative persistent carbene

Modern theoretical analysis suggests that the term "persistent carbene" is in fact a misnomer. Persistent carbenes do not in fact have a carbene electronic structure in their ground state, but instead an ylide stabilized by aromatic resonance or steric shielding. Excitation to a carbene structure then accounts for the carbene-like dimerization that some persistent carbenes undergo over the course of days.

Persistent carbenes in general, and Arduengo carbenes in particular, are popular ligands in organometallic chemistry.

History edit

Early evidence edit

In 1957, Ronald Breslow proposed that a relatively stable nucleophilic carbene, a thiazol-2-ylidene derivative of vitamin B1 (thiamine), was the catalyst involved in the benzoin condensation that yields furoin from furfural.[2][3] In this cycle, the vitamin's thiazolium ring exchanges a hydrogen atom (attached to carbon 2 of the ring) for a furfural residue. In deuterated water, the C2-proton was found to rapidly exchange for a deuteron in a statistical equilibrium.[4]

 
Deuterium exchange of the C2-proton of thiazolium salt.

This exchange was proposed to proceed via intermediacy of a thiazol-2-ylidene. In 2012 the isolation of the so-called Breslow intermediate was reported.[5][6]

In 1960, Hans-Werner Wanzlick and coworkers conjectured that carbenes derived from dihydroimidazol-2-ylidene were produced by vacuum pyrolysis of the corresponding 2-trichloromethyl dihydroimidazole compounds with the loss of chloroform.[7][8][9] They conjectured that the carbene existed in equilibrium with its dimer, a tetraaminoethylene derivative, the so-called Wanzlick equilibrium. This conjecture was challenged by Lemal and coworkers in 1964, who presented evidence that the dimer did not dissociate;[10] and by Winberg in 1965.[11] However, subsequent experiments by Denk, Herrmann and others have confirmed this equilibrium, albeit in specific circumstances.[12][13]

Isolation of persistent carbenes edit

In 1970, Wanzlick's group generated imidazol-2-ylidene carbenes by the deprotonation of an imidazolium salt.[14] Wanzlick as well as Roald Hoffmann,[9][15] proposed that these imidazole-based carbenes should be more stable than their 4,5-dihydro analogues, due to Hückel-type aromaticity. Wanzlick did not however isolate imidazol-2-ylidenes, but instead their coordination compounds with mercury and isothiocyanate:

 
Preparation and trapping of an imidazol-2-ylidene.[14]

In 1988, Guy Bertrand and others isolated a phosphinocarbene. These species can be represented as either a λ3-phosphinocarbene or λ5-phosphaacetylene:[16][17]

 
Alkyne and carbene resonances structures of Bertrand's carbene

These compounds were called "push-pull carbenes" in reference to the contrasting electron affinities of the phosphorus and silicon atoms. They exhibit both carbenic and alkynic reactivity. An X-ray structure of this molecule has not been obtained and at the time of publication some doubt remained as to their exact carbenic nature.

In 1991, Arduengo and coworkers crystallized a diaminocarbene by deprotonation of an imidazolium cation:[18]

 
Preparation of N,N-diadamantyl-imidazol-2-ylidene

This carbene, the forerunner of a large family of carbenes with the imidazol-2-ylidene core, is indefinitely stable at room temperature in the absence of oxygen and moisture. It melts at 240–241 °C without decomposition. The 13C NMR spectrum shows a signal at 211 ppm for the carbenic atom.[19] The X-ray structure revealed longer N–C bond lengths in the ring of the carbene than in the parent imidazolium compound, indicating that there was very little double bond character to these bonds.[20]

The first air-stable ylidic carbene, a chlorinated member of the imidazol-2-ylidene family, was obtained in 1997.[21]

In 2000, Bertrand obtained additional carbenes of the phosphanyl type, including (phosphanyl)(trifluoromethyl)carbene, stable in solution at -30 °C[22] and a moderately stable (amino)(aryl)carbene with only one heteroatom adjacent to the carbenic atom.[23][24]

Stabilization through adjacent orbitals edit

 
MO's of the allylic system.

In the modern understanding, the superficially unoccupied p-orbital on a (meta)stable carbene is not, in fact, fully empty. Instead, the carbene Lewis structures are in resonance with dative bonds toward adjacent lone-pair or pi-bond orbitals.[25]

 
1,3,4,5-tetramethyl­imidazol-2-ylidene, a relatively unhindered carbene. (3D)

Early workers attributed the stability of Arduengo carbenes to the bulky N-adamantyl substituents, which prevent the carbene from dimerising. But replacement of the N-adamantyl groups with methyl groups also affords 1,3,4,5-tetramethylimidazol-2‑ylidene (Me4ImC:), a thermodynamically stable unhindered NHC.[26]

 
Bis(diisopropylamino) carbene, the first acyclic stable carbene.

In 1995, Arduengo's group obtained a carbene derivative of dihydroimidazol-2-ylidene, proving that stability did not arise from the aromaticity of the conjugated imidazole backbone.[27] The following year, the first acyclic persistent carbene demonstrated that stability did not even require a cyclic backbone.[28] Unhindered derivatives of the hydrogenated[29][30] and acyclic[30][31][32] carbenes dimerized, suggesting that Me4ImC: might be exceptional, rather than paradigmatic. But the behavior of the acyclic carbenes offered a tantalizing clue to the stabilization mechanism. [citation needed]

Unlike the cyclic derivatives, acyclic carbenes are flexible and bonds to the carbenic atom admit rotation. But bond rotation in the compound appeared hindered, suggesting a double bond character that would place the positive charge on adjacent nitrogen atoms while preserving the octet rule.[28] Indeed, most persistent carbenes are stabilized by two flanking nitrogen centers. The outliers include an aminothiocarbene and an aminooxycarbene, which use other heteroatoms,[33][34] and room-temperature-stable bis(diisopropylamino)cyclopropenylidene, in which the carbene atom is connected to two carbon atoms in a three-member, aromatic, cyclopropenylidene ring.[35]

 
Stable carbenes with oxygen or sulfur atoms bound to the carbenic atom (3D)

Classes of stable carbenes edit

The following are examples of the classes of stable carbenes isolated to date:

Imidazol-2-ylidenes edit

The first stable carbenes to be isolated were based on an imidazole ring, with the hydrogen in carbon 2 of the ring (between the two nitrogen atoms) removed, and other hydrogens replaced by various groups. These imidazol-2-ylidenes are still the most stable and the most well studied and understood family of persistent carbenes.[citation needed]

A considerable range of imidazol-2-ylidenes have been synthesised, including those in which the 1,3-positions have been functionalised with alkyl, aryl,[26] alkyloxy, alkylamino, alkylphosphino[36] and even chiral substituents:[36]

 
Stable imidazol-2-ylidenes
 
1,3-Dimesityl-4,5-dichloroimidazol-2-ylidene, the first air-stable carbene.
(View the 3D structure with external viewer.)

In particular, substitution of two chlorine atoms for the two hydrogens at ring positions 4 and 5 yielded the first air-stable carbene.[21] Its extra stability probably results from the electron-withdrawing effect of the chlorine substituents, which reduce the electron density on the carbon atom bearing the lone pair, via induction through the sigma-backbone.

Molecules containing two and even three imidazol-2-ylidene groups have also been synthesised.[37][38]

Imidazole-based carbenes are thermodynamically stable and generally have diagnostic 13C NMR chemical shift values between 210 and 230 ppm for the carbenic carbon. Typically, X-ray structures of these molecules show N–C–N bond angles of 101–102°.[citation needed]

Triazol-5-ylidenes edit

Depending on the arrangement of the three nitrogen atoms in triazol-5-ylidene, there are two possible isomers, namely 1,2,3-triazol-5-ylidenes and 1,2,4-triazol-5-ylidenes.

 
Triazol-5-ylidene isomers.

The triazol-5-ylidenes based on the 1,2,4-triazole ring are pictured below and were first prepared by Enders and coworkers[39] by vacuum pyrolysis through loss of methanol from 2-methoxytriazoles. Only a limited range of these molecules have been reported, with the triphenyl substituted molecule being commercially available.

 
Examples of 1,2,4-triazol-5-ylidenes.

Triazole-based carbenes are thermodynamically stable and have diagnostic 13C NMR chemical shift values between 210 and 220 ppm for the carbenic carbon. The X-ray structure of the triphenyl substituted carbene above shows an N–C–N bond angle of around 101°. The 5-methoxytriazole precursor to this carbene was made by the treatment of a triazolium salt with sodium methoxide, which attacks as a nucleophile.[39] This may indicate that these carbenes are less aromatic than imidazol-2-ylidenes, as the imidazolium precursors do not react with nucleophiles due to the resultant loss of aromaticity.[citation needed]

Other diaminocarbenes edit

The two families above can be seen as special cases of a broader class of compounds which have a carbenic atom bridging two nitrogen atoms. A range of such diaminocarbenes have been prepared principally by Roger Alder's research group. In some of these compounds, the N–C–N unit is a member of a five- or six-membered non-aromatic ring,[27][29][40] including a bicyclic example. In other examples, the adjacent nitrogens are connected only through the carbenic atom, and may or may not be part of separate rings.[28][31][32]

 
Synthesised cyclic and acyclic diaminocarbenes

Unlike the aromatic imidazol-2-ylidenes or triazol-5-ylidenes, these carbenes appear not to be thermodynamically stable, as shown by the dimerisation of some unhindered cyclic and acyclic examples.[29][31] Studies[30] suggest that these carbenes dimerise via acid catalysed dimerisation (as in the Wanzlick equilibrium).

Diaminocarbenes have diagnostic 13C NMR chemical shift values between 230 and 270 ppm for the carbenic atom. The X-ray structure of dihydroimidazole-2-ylidene shows a N–C–N bond angle of about 106°, whilst the angle of the acyclic carbene is 121°, both greater than those seen for imidazol-2-ylidenes.

Heteroamino carbenes edit

There exist several variants of the stable carbenes above where one of the nitrogen atoms adjacent to the carbene center (the α nitrogens) has been replaced by an alternative heteroatom, such as oxygen, sulfur, or phosphorus.[16][17][33][34]

 
Synthesised heteroamino carbenes (top and bottom right) and Bertrand's carbenes (bottom left)

In particular, the formal substitution of sulfur for one of the nitrogens in imidazole would yield the aromatic heterocyclic compound thiazole. A thiazole based carbene (analogous to the carbene postulated by Breslow)[41] has been prepared and characterised by X-ray crystallography.[33] Other non-aromatic aminocarbenes with O, S and P atoms adjacent (i.e. alpha) to the carbene centre have been prepared, for example, thio- and oxyiminium based carbenes have been characterised by X-ray crystallography.[34]

Since oxygen and sulfur are divalent, steric protection of the carbenic centre is limited especially when the N–C–X unit is part of a ring. These acyclic carbenes have diagnostic 13C NMR chemical shift values between 250 and 300 ppm for the carbenic carbon, further downfield than any other types of stable carbene. X-ray structures have shown N–C–X bond angles of around 104° and 109° respectively.[citation needed]

Carbenes that formally derive from imidazole-2-ylidenes by substitution of sulfur, oxygen, or other chalcogens for both α-nitrogens are expected to be unstable, as they have the potential to dissociate into an alkyne (R1C≡CR2) and a carbon dichalcogenide (X1=C=X2).[42][43]

Non-amino carbenes edit

The reaction of carbon disulfide (CS2) with electron deficient acetylene derivatives is proposed to give transient 1,3-dithiolium carbenes (i.e. where X1 = X2 = S), which then dimerise to give derivatives of tetrathiafulvene. Thus it is possible that the reverse of this process might be occurring in similar carbenes.[42][43]

Bertrand's carbenes edit

In Bertrand's persistent carbenes, the unsaturated carbon is bonded to a phosphorus and a silicon.[44] However, these compounds seem to exhibit some alkynic properties, and when published the exact carbenic nature of these red oils was in debate.[17]

Other nucleophilic carbenes edit

One stable N-heterocyclic carbene[45] has a structure analogous to borazine with one boron atom replaced by a methylene group. This results in a planar six-electron compound.

 
In the second step of this reaction sequence the proton is abstracted by LiTMP, while the two cyclohexyl groups shield the carbene.[45]

Cyclopropenylidenes edit

Another family of carbenes is based on a cyclopropenylidene core, a three-carbon ring with a double bond between the two atoms adjacent to the carbenic one. This family is exemplified by bis(diisopropylamino)cyclopropenylidene.[35]

Triplet state carbenes edit

Persistent carbenes tend to exist in the singlet, dimerizing when forced into triplet states. Nevertheless, Hideo Tomioka and associates used electron delocalization to produce a comparatively stable triplet carbene (bis(9-anthryl)carbene) in 2001. It has an unusually long half-life of 19 minutes.[46][47]

Although the figure below shows the two parts of the molecule in one flat plane, molecular geometry puts the two aromatic parts in orthogonal positions with respect to each other.

 
Delocalization in a stable triplet carbene reported by Tomioka (2001)

In 2006 a triplet carbene was reported by the same group with a half-life of 40 minutes.[48] This carbene is prepared by a photochemical decomposition of a diazomethane precursor by 300 nm light in benzene with expulsion of nitrogen gas.

Again the figure below is not an adequate representation of the actual molecular structure: both phenyl rings are positioned orthogonal with respect to each other. The carbene carbon has an sp-hybridisation, the two remaining orthogonal p-orbitals each conjugating with one of the aromatic rings.

 
A persistent triplet carbene (right), synthesized by Itoh (2006)

Exposure to oxygen (a triplet diradical) converts this carbene to the corresponding benzophenone. The diphenylmethane compound is formed when it is trapped by cyclohexa-1,4-diene. As with the other carbenes, this species contains large bulky substituents, namely bromine and the trifluoromethyl groups on the phenyl rings, that shield the carbene and prevent or slow down the process of dimerization to a 1,1,2,2-tetra(phenyl)alkene. Based on computer simulations, the distance of the divalent carbon atom to its neighbors is claimed to be 138 picometers with a bond angle of 158.8°. The planes of the phenyl groups are almost at right angles to each other (the dihedral angle being 85.7°).

Mesoionic carbenes edit

Mesoionic carbenes (MICs) are similar to N-heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) except that canonical resonance structures with the carbene depicted cannot be drawn without adding additional charges. Mesoionic carbenes are also referred to as abnormal N-heterocyclic carbenes (aNHC) or remote N-heterocyclic carbenes (rNHC). A variety of free carbenes can be isolated and are stable at room temperature. Other free carbenes are not stable and are susceptible to intermolecular decomposition pathways.[citation needed]

Chemical properties edit

Basicity and nucleophilicity edit

The imidazol-2-ylidenes are strong bases, having pKa ≈ 24 for the conjugate acid in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO):[49]

 
Measurement of the pKa value for the conjugate acid of an imidazol-2-ylidene

However, further work showed that diaminocarbenes will deprotonate the DMSO solvent, with the resulting anion reacting with the resulting amidinium salt.

 
Using D6-DMSO as an NMR solvent can have unexpected results.

Reaction of imidazol-2-ylidenes with 1-bromohexane gave 90% of the 2-substituted adduct, with only 10% of the corresponding alkene, indicating that these molecules are also reasonably nucleophilic.

pKa values for the conjugate acids of several NHC families have been examined in aqueous solution. pKa values of triazolium ions lie in the range 16.5–17.8,[50] around 3 pKa units more acidic than related imidazolium ions.[51]

Dimerisation edit

At one time, stable carbenes were thought to reversibly dimerise through the so-called Wanzlick equilibrium. However, imidazol-2-ylidenes and triazol-5-ylidenes are thermodynamically stable and do not dimerise, and have been stored in solution in the absence of water and air for years. This is presumably due to the aromatic nature of these carbenes, which is lost upon dimerisation. In fact imidazol-2-ylidenes are so thermodynamically stable that only in highly constrained conditions are these carbenes forced to dimerise.

Chen and Taton[52] made a doubly tethered diimidazol-2-ylidene by deprotonating the respective diimidazolium salt. Only the deprotonation of the doubly tethered diimidazolium salt with the shorter methylene bridge (–CH2–) resulted in the dicarbene dimer:

 
Dimerisation of tethered diimidazol-2-ylidenes

If this dimer existed as a dicarbene, the electron lone pairs on the carbenic carbon would be forced into close proximity. Presumably the resulting repulsive electrostatic interactions would have a significant destabilising effect. To avoid this electronic interaction, the carbene units dimerise.

On the other hand, heteroamino carbenes (such as R2N–C–OR or R2N–C–SR) and non-aromatic carbenes such as diaminocarbenes (such as R2N–C–NR2) have been shown to dimerise,[53] albeit quite slowly. This has been presumed to be due to the high barrier to singlet state dimerisation:

 
"Least motion" (path A – not allowed) and "non-least motion" (path B) routes of carbene dimerisation.

Diaminocarbenes do not truly dimerise, but rather form the dimer by reaction via formamidinium salts, a protonated precursor species.[30] Accordingly, this reaction can be acid catalysed. This reaction occurs because unlike imidazolium based carbenes, there is no loss of aromaticity in protonation of the carbene.

Unlike the dimerisation of triplet state carbenes, these singlet state carbenes do not approach head to head ("least motion"), but rather the carbene lone pair attacks the empty carbon p-orbital ("non-least motion"). Carbene dimerisation can be catalyzed by both acids and metals.

Reactivity edit

The chemistry of stable carbenes has not been fully explored. However, Enders et al.[39][54][55] have performed a range of organic reactions involving a triazol-5-ylidene. These reactions are outlined below and may be considered as a model for other carbenes.

 
Reactions of triazol-5-ylidene[55]
a 3,6-diphenyl-1,2,4,5-tetrazine, toluene 92% e 2 equiv., PhNCO, toluene, reflux 92%
b RXH, RT 95–97% f CS2, toluene, or PhNCS, THF, RT 71–90%
c O2, S8, or Se, toluene, reflux 54–68% g Maleimide, THF, RT 47–84%
d R1CH=CHR2, THF, RT 25–68% h Dimethylacetylene dicarboxylate, THF, reflux 21%

These carbenes tend to behave in a nucleophilic fashion (e and f), performing insertion reactions (b), addition reactions (c), [2+1] cycloadditions (d, g and h), [4+1] cycloadditions (a) as well as simple deprotonations. The insertion reactions (b) probably proceed via deprotonation, resulting in the generation of a nucleophile (XR) which can attack the generated salt giving the impression of a H–X insertion.

The reported stable isothiazole carbene (2b) derived from an isothiazolium perchlorate (1)[56] was questioned.[57] The researchers were only able to isolate 2-imino-2H-thiete (4). The intermediate 3 was proposed through a rearrangement reaction. The carbene 2b is no longer considered as stable.[58]

 
Isothiazole carbene (2b) was proved to be unstable.[57]

Carbene complexation edit

Imidazol-2-ylidenes, triazol-5-ylidenes (and less so, diaminocarbenes) have been shown to coordinate to a plethora of elements, from alkali metals, main group elements, transition metals and even lanthanides and actinides. A periodic table of elements gives some idea of the complexes which have been prepared, and in many cases these have been identified by single crystal X-ray crystallography.[40][59][60] Stable carbenes are believed to behave in a similar fashion to organophosphines in their coordination properties to metals. These ligands are said to be good σ-donors through the carbenic lone pair, but poor π-acceptors due to internal ligand back-donation from the nitrogen atoms adjacent to the carbene centre, and so are able to coordinate to even relatively electron deficient metals. Enders [61] and Hermann[62][63] have shown that these carbenes are suitable replacements for phosphine ligands in several catalytic cycles. Whilst they have found that these ligands do not activate the metal catalyst as much as phosphine ligands they often result in more robust catalysts. Several catalytic systems have been looked into by Hermann and Enders, using catalysts containing imidazole and triazole carbene ligands, with moderate success.[59][61][62][63] Grubbs [64] has reported replacing a phosphine ligand (PCy3) with an imidazol-2-ylidene in the olefin metathesis catalyst RuCl2(PCy3)2CHPh, and noted increased ring closing metathesis as well as exhibiting "a remarkable air and water stability". Molecules containing two and three carbene moieties have been prepared as potential bidentate and tridentate carbene ligands.[37][38]

Legend
  Carbene complex with element known
  No carbene complex with element known

Carbenes in organometallic chemistry & catalysis edit

Carbenes can be stabilised as organometallic species. These transition metal carbene complexes fall into two categories:[citation needed]

  • Fischer carbenes in which carbenes are tethered to a metal and an electron-withdrawing group (usually a carbonyl),
  • Schrock carbenes; in which carbenes are tethered to a metal and an electron-donating group. The reactions that such carbenes participate in are very different from those in which organic carbenes participate.

Triplet state carbene chemistry edit

Persistent triplet state carbenes are likely to have very similar reactivity as other non-persistent triplet state carbenes.

Physical properties edit

 
Carbene peak in 13C NMR

Those carbenes that have been isolated to date tend to be colorless solids with low melting points. These carbenes tend to sublime at low temperatures under high vacuum.

One of the more useful physical properties is the diagnostic chemical shift of the carbenic carbon atom in the 13C-NMR spectrum. Typically this peak is in the range between 200 and 300 ppm, where few other peaks appear in the 13C-NMR spectrum. An example is shown on the left for a cyclic diaminocarbene which has a carbenic peak at 238 ppm.

Upon coordination to metal centers, the 13C carbene resonance usually shifts highfield, depending on the Lewis acidity of the complex fragment. Based on this observation, Huynh et al. developed a new methodology to determine ligand donor strengths by 13C NMR analysis of trans-palladium(II)-carbene complexes. The use of a 13C-labeled N-heterocyclic carbene ligand also allows for the study of mixed carbene-phosphine complexes, which undergo trans-cis-isomerization due to the trans effect.[65]

Applications edit

 
A second generation Grubbs' catalyst.

NHCs are widely used as ancillary ligand in organometallic chemistry. One practical application is the ruthenium-based Grubbs' catalyst and NHC-Palladium Complexes for cross-coupling reactions.[66][67][68] NHC-metal complexes, specifically Ag(I)-NHC complexes have been widely tested for their biological applications.[69]

Preparation methods edit

NHCs are often strongly basic (the pKa value of the conjugate acid of an imidazol-2-ylidene was measured at ca. 24)[49] and react with oxygen. Clearly these reactions are performed using air-free techniques, avoiding compounds of even moderate acidity. Although imidazolium salts are stable to nucleophilic addition, other non-aromatic salts are not (i.e. formamidinium salts).[70]

In these cases, strong unhindered nucleophiles are avoided whether they are generated in situ or are present as an impurity in other reagents (such as LiOH in BuLi).

Several approaches have been developed in order to prepare stable carbenes, these are outlined below.

Deprotonation edit

Deprotonation of carbene precursor salts with strong bases has proved a reliable route to almost all stable carbenes:

 
Deprotonation of precursor salts to give stable carbenes.

Imidazol-2-ylidenes and dihydroimidazol-2-ylidenes, such IMes, have been prepared by the deprotonation of the respective imidazolium and dihydroimidazolium salts. The acyclic carbenes[28][31] and the tetrahydropyrimidinyl[40] based carbenes were prepared by deprotonation using strong homogeneous bases.

Several bases and reaction conditions have been employed with varying success. The degree of success has been principally dependent on the nature of the precursor being deprotonated. The major drawback with this method of preparation is the problem of isolation of the free carbene from the metals ions used in their preparation.

Metal hydride bases edit

One might believe that sodium or potassium hydride[27][33] would be the ideal base for deprotonating these precursor salts. The hydride should react irreversibly with the loss of hydrogen to give the desired carbene, with the inorganic by-products and excess hydride being removed by filtration. In practice this reaction is often too slow, requiring the addition of DMSO or t-BuOH.[18][26] These reagents generate soluble catalysts, which increase the rate of reaction of this heterogeneous system, via the generation of tert-butoxide or dimsyl anion. However, these catalysts have proved ineffective for the preparation of non-imidazolium adducts as they tend to act as nucleophiles towards the precursor salts and in so doing are destroyed. The presence of hydroxide ions as an impurity in the metal hydride could also destroy non-aromatic salts.

Deprotonation with sodium or potassium hydride in a mixture of liquid ammonia/THF at −40 °C has been reported[36] for imidazole-based carbenes. Arduengo and coworkers[33] managed to prepare a dihydroimidazol-2-ylidene using NaH. However, this method has not been applied to the preparation of diaminocarbenes. In some cases, potassium tert-butoxide can be employed without the addition of a metal hydride.[26]

Alkyllithiums edit

The use of alkyllithiums as strong bases[18] has not been extensively studied, and have been unreliable for deprotonation of precursor salts. With non-aromatic salts, n-BuLi and PhLi can act as nucleophiles whilst t-BuLi can on occasion act as a source of hydride, reducing the salt with the generation of isobutene:

 
Reduction of formamidinium salts with tert-butyllithium

Amides bases edit

Lithium amides like the diisopropylamide (LDA) and the (tetramethylpiperidide (LiTMP))[28][31] generally work well for the deprotonation of all types of salts, providing that not too much LiOH is present in the n-butyllithium used to make the lithium amide. Titration of lithium amide can be used to determine the amount of hydroxide in solution. The deprotonation of precursor salts with metal hexamethyldisilazides[40] works very cleanly for the deprotonation of all types of salts, except for unhindered formamidinium salts, where this base can act as a nucleophile to give a triaminomethane adduct.

Metal-free carbene preparation edit

 
Stable carbenes readily coordinate to metals; in this case a diaminocarbene coordinates to KHMDS to form a complex.

The preparation of stable carbenes free from metal cations has been keenly sought to allow further study of the carbene species in isolation from these metals. Separating a carbene from a carbene-metal complex can be problematic due to the stability of the complex. Accordingly, it is preferable to make the carbene free from these metals in the first place. Indeed, some metal ions, rather than stabilising the carbene, have been implicated in the catalytic dimerisation of unhindered examples.

Shown right is an X-ray structure showing a complex between a diaminocarbene and potassium HMDS. This complex was formed when excess KHMDS was used as a strong base to deprotonate the formamidinium salt. Removing lithium ions resulting from deprotonation with reagents such as lithium diisopropylamide (LDA) can be especially problematic. Potassium and sodium salt by-products tend to precipitate from solution and can be removed. Lithium ions may be chemically removed by binding to species such as cryptands or crown ethers.

Metal free carbenes have been prepared in several ways as outlined below:

Dechalcogenation edit

Another approach of preparing carbenes has relied on the desulfurisation of thioureas with potassium in THF.[29][71] A contributing factor to the success of this reaction is that the byproduct, potassium sulfide, is insoluble in the solvent. The elevated temperatures suggest that this method is not suitable for the preparation of unstable dimerising carbenes. A single example of the deoxygenation of a urea with a fluorene derived carbene to give the tetramethyldiaminocarbene and fluorenone has also been reported:[72]

 
Preparation of carbenes by dechalcogenation

The desulfurisation of thioureas with molten potassium to give imidazol-2-ylidenes or diaminocarbenes has not been widely used. The method was used to prepare dihydroimidazole carbenes.[29]

Vacuum pyrolysis edit

Vacuum pyrolysis, with the removal of neutral volatile byproducts i.e. methanol or chloroform, has been used to prepare dihydroimidazole and triazole based carbenes. Historically the removal of chloroform by vacuum pyrolysis of adducts A was used by Wanzlick[8] in his early attempts to prepare dihydroimidazol-2-ylidenes but this method is not widely used. The Enders laboratory[39] has used vacuum pyrolysis of adduct B to generate a triazol-5-ylidene.

 
Preparation of carbenes via vacuum pyrolysis.

Bis(trimethylsilyl)mercury edit

Bis(trimethylsilyl)mercury (CH3)3Si-Hg-Si(CH3)3 reacts with chloro-iminium and chloro-amidinium salts to give a metal-free carbene and elemental mercury.[73] For example:

(CH3)3Si−Hg−Si(CH3)3 + R2N=C(Cl)−NR+
2
Cl → R2N−C−NR2 + Hg(l) + 2(CH3)3SiCl

Photochemical decomposition edit

Persistent triplet state carbenes have been prepared by photochemical decomposition of a diazomethane product via the expulsion of nitrogen gas, at a wavelength of 300 nm in benzene.

Purification edit

 
Sublimation of a carbene.

Stable carbenes are very reactive, and so the minimum amount of handling is desirable using air-free techniques. However, provided rigorously dry, relatively non-acidic and air-free materials are used, stable carbenes are reasonably robust to handling per se. By way of example, a stable carbene prepared from potassium hydride can be filtered through a dry celite pad to remove excess KH (and resulting salts) from the reaction. On a relatively small scale, a suspension containing a stable carbene in solution can be allowed to settle and the supernatant solution pushed through a dried membrane syringe filter. Stable carbenes are readily soluble in non-polar solvents such as hexane, and so typically recrystallisation of stable carbenes can be difficult, due to the unavailability of suitable non-acidic polar solvents. Air-free sublimation as shown right can be an effective method of purification, although temperatures below 60 °C under high vacuum are preferable as these carbenes are relatively volatile and also could begin to decompose at these higher temperatures. Indeed, sublimation in some cases can give single crystals suitable for X-ray analysis. However, strong complexation to metal ions like lithium will in most cases prevent sublimation.

References edit

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Further reading edit

Reviews on persistent carbenes:

  • Hopkinson, M. N.; Richter, C.; Schedler, M.; Glorius, F. (2014). "An Overview of N-Heterocyclic Carbenes". Nature. 510 (7506): 485–496. Bibcode:2014Natur.510..485H. doi:10.1038/nature13384. PMID 24965649. S2CID 672379..
  • Carbene Chemistry: From Fleeting Intermediates to Powerful Reagents, (Chapter 4, Hideo Tomioka (triplet state); Chapter 5 (singlet state), Roger W. Alder) - ed. Guy Bertrand
  • Reactive Intermediate Chemistry By Robert A. Moss, Matthew Platz, Maitland Jones (Chapter 8, Stable Singlet Carbenes, Guy Bertrand)
  • R. W. Alder, in 'Diaminocarbenes: exploring structure and reactivity', ed. G. Bertrand, New York, 2002
  • M. Regitz (1996). "Stable Carbenes—Illusion or Reality?". Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 30 (6): 674–676. doi:10.1002/anie.199106741.

For a review on the physico-chemical properties (electronics, sterics, ...) of N-heterocyclic carbenes:

  • T. Dröge; F. Glorius (2010). "The Measure of All Rings - N-Heterocyclic Carbenes". Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 49 (39): 6940–6952. doi:10.1002/anie.201001865. PMID 20715233.

persistent, carbene, persistent, carbene, also, known, stable, carbene, organic, molecule, whose, natural, resonance, structure, carbon, atom, with, incomplete, octet, carbene, does, exhibit, tremendous, instability, typically, associated, with, such, moieties. A persistent carbene also known as stable carbene is an organic molecule whose natural resonance structure has a carbon atom with incomplete octet a carbene but does not exhibit the tremendous instability typically associated with such moieties The best known examples and by far largest subgroup are the N heterocyclic carbenes NHC 1 sometimes called Arduengo carbenes in which nitrogen atoms flank the formal carbene 1 3 Dimesityl imidazol 4 5 dihydro 2 ylidene a representative persistent carbeneModern theoretical analysis suggests that the term persistent carbene is in fact a misnomer Persistent carbenes do not in fact have a carbene electronic structure in their ground state but instead an ylide stabilized by aromatic resonance or steric shielding Excitation to a carbene structure then accounts for the carbene like dimerization that some persistent carbenes undergo over the course of days Persistent carbenes in general and Arduengo carbenes in particular are popular ligands in organometallic chemistry Contents 1 History 1 1 Early evidence 1 2 Isolation of persistent carbenes 1 3 Stabilization through adjacent orbitals 2 Classes of stable carbenes 2 1 Imidazol 2 ylidenes 2 2 Triazol 5 ylidenes 2 3 Other diaminocarbenes 2 4 Heteroamino carbenes 2 5 Non amino carbenes 2 6 Bertrand s carbenes 2 7 Other nucleophilic carbenes 2 8 Cyclopropenylidenes 2 9 Triplet state carbenes 3 Mesoionic carbenes 4 Chemical properties 4 1 Basicity and nucleophilicity 4 2 Dimerisation 4 3 Reactivity 4 4 Carbene complexation 4 5 Carbenes in organometallic chemistry amp catalysis 4 6 Triplet state carbene chemistry 5 Physical properties 6 Applications 7 Preparation methods 7 1 Deprotonation 7 1 1 Metal hydride bases 7 1 2 Alkyllithiums 7 1 3 Amides bases 7 2 Metal free carbene preparation 7 2 1 Dechalcogenation 7 2 2 Vacuum pyrolysis 7 2 3 Bis trimethylsilyl mercury 7 2 4 Photochemical decomposition 7 3 Purification 8 References 9 Further readingHistory editEarly evidence edit In 1957 Ronald Breslow proposed that a relatively stable nucleophilic carbene a thiazol 2 ylidene derivative of vitamin B1 thiamine was the catalyst involved in the benzoin condensation that yields furoin from furfural 2 3 In this cycle the vitamin s thiazolium ring exchanges a hydrogen atom attached to carbon 2 of the ring for a furfural residue In deuterated water the C2 proton was found to rapidly exchange for a deuteron in a statistical equilibrium 4 nbsp Deuterium exchange of the C2 proton of thiazolium salt This exchange was proposed to proceed via intermediacy of a thiazol 2 ylidene In 2012 the isolation of the so called Breslow intermediate was reported 5 6 In 1960 Hans Werner Wanzlick and coworkers conjectured that carbenes derived from dihydroimidazol 2 ylidene were produced by vacuum pyrolysis of the corresponding 2 trichloromethyl dihydroimidazole compounds with the loss of chloroform 7 8 9 They conjectured that the carbene existed in equilibrium with its dimer a tetraaminoethylene derivative the so called Wanzlick equilibrium This conjecture was challenged by Lemal and coworkers in 1964 who presented evidence that the dimer did not dissociate 10 and by Winberg in 1965 11 However subsequent experiments by Denk Herrmann and others have confirmed this equilibrium albeit in specific circumstances 12 13 Isolation of persistent carbenes edit In 1970 Wanzlick s group generated imidazol 2 ylidene carbenes by the deprotonation of an imidazolium salt 14 Wanzlick as well as Roald Hoffmann 9 15 proposed that these imidazole based carbenes should be more stable than their 4 5 dihydro analogues due to Huckel type aromaticity Wanzlick did not however isolate imidazol 2 ylidenes but instead their coordination compounds with mercury and isothiocyanate nbsp Preparation and trapping of an imidazol 2 ylidene 14 In 1988 Guy Bertrand and others isolated a phosphinocarbene These species can be represented as either a l3 phosphinocarbene or l5 phosphaacetylene 16 17 nbsp Alkyne and carbene resonances structures of Bertrand s carbeneThese compounds were called push pull carbenes in reference to the contrasting electron affinities of the phosphorus and silicon atoms They exhibit both carbenic and alkynic reactivity An X ray structure of this molecule has not been obtained and at the time of publication some doubt remained as to their exact carbenic nature In 1991 Arduengo and coworkers crystallized a diaminocarbene by deprotonation of an imidazolium cation 18 nbsp Preparation of N N diadamantyl imidazol 2 ylideneThis carbene the forerunner of a large family of carbenes with the imidazol 2 ylidene core is indefinitely stable at room temperature in the absence of oxygen and moisture It melts at 240 241 C without decomposition The 13C NMR spectrum shows a signal at 211 ppm for the carbenic atom 19 The X ray structure revealed longer N C bond lengths in the ring of the carbene than in the parent imidazolium compound indicating that there was very little double bond character to these bonds 20 The first air stable ylidic carbene a chlorinated member of the imidazol 2 ylidene family was obtained in 1997 21 In 2000 Bertrand obtained additional carbenes of the phosphanyl type including phosphanyl trifluoromethyl carbene stable in solution at 30 C 22 and a moderately stable amino aryl carbene with only one heteroatom adjacent to the carbenic atom 23 24 Stabilization through adjacent orbitals edit nbsp MO s of the allylic system In the modern understanding the superficially unoccupied p orbital on a meta stable carbene is not in fact fully empty Instead the carbene Lewis structures are in resonance with dative bonds toward adjacent lone pair or pi bond orbitals 25 nbsp 1 3 4 5 tetramethyl imidazol 2 ylidene a relatively unhindered carbene 3D Early workers attributed the stability of Arduengo carbenes to the bulky N adamantyl substituents which prevent the carbene from dimerising But replacement of the N adamantyl groups with methyl groups also affords 1 3 4 5 tetramethylimidazol 2 ylidene Me4ImC a thermodynamically stable unhindered NHC 26 nbsp Bis diisopropylamino carbene the first acyclic stable carbene In 1995 Arduengo s group obtained a carbene derivative of dihydroimidazol 2 ylidene proving that stability did not arise from the aromaticity of the conjugated imidazole backbone 27 The following year the first acyclic persistent carbene demonstrated that stability did not even require a cyclic backbone 28 Unhindered derivatives of the hydrogenated 29 30 and acyclic 30 31 32 carbenes dimerized suggesting that Me4ImC might be exceptional rather than paradigmatic But the behavior of the acyclic carbenes offered a tantalizing clue to the stabilization mechanism citation needed Unlike the cyclic derivatives acyclic carbenes are flexible and bonds to the carbenic atom admit rotation But bond rotation in the compound appeared hindered suggesting a double bond character that would place the positive charge on adjacent nitrogen atoms while preserving the octet rule 28 Indeed most persistent carbenes are stabilized by two flanking nitrogen centers The outliers include an aminothiocarbene and an aminooxycarbene which use other heteroatoms 33 34 and room temperature stable bis diisopropylamino cyclopropenylidene in which the carbene atom is connected to two carbon atoms in a three member aromatic cyclopropenylidene ring 35 nbsp Stable carbenes with oxygen or sulfur atoms bound to the carbenic atom 3D Classes of stable carbenes editThe following are examples of the classes of stable carbenes isolated to date Imidazol 2 ylidenes edit The first stable carbenes to be isolated were based on an imidazole ring with the hydrogen in carbon 2 of the ring between the two nitrogen atoms removed and other hydrogens replaced by various groups These imidazol 2 ylidenes are still the most stable and the most well studied and understood family of persistent carbenes citation needed A considerable range of imidazol 2 ylidenes have been synthesised including those in which the 1 3 positions have been functionalised with alkyl aryl 26 alkyloxy alkylamino alkylphosphino 36 and even chiral substituents 36 nbsp Stable imidazol 2 ylidenes nbsp 1 3 Dimesityl 4 5 dichloroimidazol 2 ylidene the first air stable carbene View the 3D structure with external viewer In particular substitution of two chlorine atoms for the two hydrogens at ring positions 4 and 5 yielded the first air stable carbene 21 Its extra stability probably results from the electron withdrawing effect of the chlorine substituents which reduce the electron density on the carbon atom bearing the lone pair via induction through the sigma backbone Molecules containing two and even three imidazol 2 ylidene groups have also been synthesised 37 38 Imidazole based carbenes are thermodynamically stable and generally have diagnostic 13C NMR chemical shift values between 210 and 230 ppm for the carbenic carbon Typically X ray structures of these molecules show N C N bond angles of 101 102 citation needed Triazol 5 ylidenes edit Depending on the arrangement of the three nitrogen atoms in triazol 5 ylidene there are two possible isomers namely 1 2 3 triazol 5 ylidenes and 1 2 4 triazol 5 ylidenes nbsp Triazol 5 ylidene isomers The triazol 5 ylidenes based on the 1 2 4 triazole ring are pictured below and were first prepared by Enders and coworkers 39 by vacuum pyrolysis through loss of methanol from 2 methoxytriazoles Only a limited range of these molecules have been reported with the triphenyl substituted molecule being commercially available nbsp Examples of 1 2 4 triazol 5 ylidenes Triazole based carbenes are thermodynamically stable and have diagnostic 13C NMR chemical shift values between 210 and 220 ppm for the carbenic carbon The X ray structure of the triphenyl substituted carbene above shows an N C N bond angle of around 101 The 5 methoxytriazole precursor to this carbene was made by the treatment of a triazolium salt with sodium methoxide which attacks as a nucleophile 39 This may indicate that these carbenes are less aromatic than imidazol 2 ylidenes as the imidazolium precursors do not react with nucleophiles due to the resultant loss of aromaticity citation needed Other diaminocarbenes edit The two families above can be seen as special cases of a broader class of compounds which have a carbenic atom bridging two nitrogen atoms A range of such diaminocarbenes have been prepared principally by Roger Alder s research group In some of these compounds the N C N unit is a member of a five or six membered non aromatic ring 27 29 40 including a bicyclic example In other examples the adjacent nitrogens are connected only through the carbenic atom and may or may not be part of separate rings 28 31 32 nbsp Synthesised cyclic and acyclic diaminocarbenesUnlike the aromatic imidazol 2 ylidenes or triazol 5 ylidenes these carbenes appear not to be thermodynamically stable as shown by the dimerisation of some unhindered cyclic and acyclic examples 29 31 Studies 30 suggest that these carbenes dimerise via acid catalysed dimerisation as in the Wanzlick equilibrium Diaminocarbenes have diagnostic 13C NMR chemical shift values between 230 and 270 ppm for the carbenic atom The X ray structure of dihydroimidazole 2 ylidene shows a N C N bond angle of about 106 whilst the angle of the acyclic carbene is 121 both greater than those seen for imidazol 2 ylidenes Heteroamino carbenes edit There exist several variants of the stable carbenes above where one of the nitrogen atoms adjacent to the carbene center the a nitrogens has been replaced by an alternative heteroatom such as oxygen sulfur or phosphorus 16 17 33 34 nbsp Synthesised heteroamino carbenes top and bottom right and Bertrand s carbenes bottom left In particular the formal substitution of sulfur for one of the nitrogens in imidazole would yield the aromatic heterocyclic compound thiazole A thiazole based carbene analogous to the carbene postulated by Breslow 41 has been prepared and characterised by X ray crystallography 33 Other non aromatic aminocarbenes with O S and P atoms adjacent i e alpha to the carbene centre have been prepared for example thio and oxyiminium based carbenes have been characterised by X ray crystallography 34 Since oxygen and sulfur are divalent steric protection of the carbenic centre is limited especially when the N C X unit is part of a ring These acyclic carbenes have diagnostic 13C NMR chemical shift values between 250 and 300 ppm for the carbenic carbon further downfield than any other types of stable carbene X ray structures have shown N C X bond angles of around 104 and 109 respectively citation needed Carbenes that formally derive from imidazole 2 ylidenes by substitution of sulfur oxygen or other chalcogens for both a nitrogens are expected to be unstable as they have the potential to dissociate into an alkyne R1C CR2 and a carbon dichalcogenide X1 C X2 42 43 Non amino carbenes edit The reaction of carbon disulfide CS2 with electron deficient acetylene derivatives is proposed to give transient 1 3 dithiolium carbenes i e where X1 X2 S which then dimerise to give derivatives of tetrathiafulvene Thus it is possible that the reverse of this process might be occurring in similar carbenes 42 43 Bertrand s carbenes edit In Bertrand s persistent carbenes the unsaturated carbon is bonded to a phosphorus and a silicon 44 However these compounds seem to exhibit some alkynic properties and when published the exact carbenic nature of these red oils was in debate 17 Other nucleophilic carbenes edit One stable N heterocyclic carbene 45 has a structure analogous to borazine with one boron atom replaced by a methylene group This results in a planar six electron compound nbsp In the second step of this reaction sequence the proton is abstracted by LiTMP while the two cyclohexyl groups shield the carbene 45 Cyclopropenylidenes edit Another family of carbenes is based on a cyclopropenylidene core a three carbon ring with a double bond between the two atoms adjacent to the carbenic one This family is exemplified by bis diisopropylamino cyclopropenylidene 35 Triplet state carbenes edit Persistent carbenes tend to exist in the singlet dimerizing when forced into triplet states Nevertheless Hideo Tomioka and associates used electron delocalization to produce a comparatively stable triplet carbene bis 9 anthryl carbene in 2001 It has an unusually long half life of 19 minutes 46 47 Although the figure below shows the two parts of the molecule in one flat plane molecular geometry puts the two aromatic parts in orthogonal positions with respect to each other nbsp Delocalization in a stable triplet carbene reported by Tomioka 2001 In 2006 a triplet carbene was reported by the same group with a half life of 40 minutes 48 This carbene is prepared by a photochemical decomposition of a diazomethane precursor by 300 nm light in benzene with expulsion of nitrogen gas Again the figure below is not an adequate representation of the actual molecular structure both phenyl rings are positioned orthogonal with respect to each other The carbene carbon has an sp hybridisation the two remaining orthogonal p orbitals each conjugating with one of the aromatic rings nbsp A persistent triplet carbene right synthesized by Itoh 2006 Exposure to oxygen a triplet diradical converts this carbene to the corresponding benzophenone The diphenylmethane compound is formed when it is trapped by cyclohexa 1 4 diene As with the other carbenes this species contains large bulky substituents namely bromine and the trifluoromethyl groups on the phenyl rings that shield the carbene and prevent or slow down the process of dimerization to a 1 1 2 2 tetra phenyl alkene Based on computer simulations the distance of the divalent carbon atom to its neighbors is claimed to be 138 picometers with a bond angle of 158 8 The planes of the phenyl groups are almost at right angles to each other the dihedral angle being 85 7 Mesoionic carbenes editMain article Mesoionic carbene Mesoionic carbenes MICs are similar to N heterocyclic carbenes NHCs except that canonical resonance structures with the carbene depicted cannot be drawn without adding additional charges Mesoionic carbenes are also referred to as abnormal N heterocyclic carbenes aNHC or remote N heterocyclic carbenes rNHC A variety of free carbenes can be isolated and are stable at room temperature Other free carbenes are not stable and are susceptible to intermolecular decomposition pathways citation needed Chemical properties editBasicity and nucleophilicity edit The imidazol 2 ylidenes are strong bases having pKa 24 for the conjugate acid in dimethyl sulfoxide DMSO 49 nbsp Measurement of the pKa value for the conjugate acid of an imidazol 2 ylideneHowever further work showed that diaminocarbenes will deprotonate the DMSO solvent with the resulting anion reacting with the resulting amidinium salt nbsp Using D6 DMSO as an NMR solvent can have unexpected results Reaction of imidazol 2 ylidenes with 1 bromohexane gave 90 of the 2 substituted adduct with only 10 of the corresponding alkene indicating that these molecules are also reasonably nucleophilic pKa values for the conjugate acids of several NHC families have been examined in aqueous solution pKa values of triazolium ions lie in the range 16 5 17 8 50 around 3 pKa units more acidic than related imidazolium ions 51 Dimerisation edit At one time stable carbenes were thought to reversibly dimerise through the so called Wanzlick equilibrium However imidazol 2 ylidenes and triazol 5 ylidenes are thermodynamically stable and do not dimerise and have been stored in solution in the absence of water and air for years This is presumably due to the aromatic nature of these carbenes which is lost upon dimerisation In fact imidazol 2 ylidenes are so thermodynamically stable that only in highly constrained conditions are these carbenes forced to dimerise Chen and Taton 52 made a doubly tethered diimidazol 2 ylidene by deprotonating the respective diimidazolium salt Only the deprotonation of the doubly tethered diimidazolium salt with the shorter methylene bridge CH2 resulted in the dicarbene dimer nbsp Dimerisation of tethered diimidazol 2 ylidenesIf this dimer existed as a dicarbene the electron lone pairs on the carbenic carbon would be forced into close proximity Presumably the resulting repulsive electrostatic interactions would have a significant destabilising effect To avoid this electronic interaction the carbene units dimerise On the other hand heteroamino carbenes such as R2N C OR or R2N C SR and non aromatic carbenes such as diaminocarbenes such as R2N C NR2 have been shown to dimerise 53 albeit quite slowly This has been presumed to be due to the high barrier to singlet state dimerisation nbsp Least motion path A not allowed and non least motion path B routes of carbene dimerisation Diaminocarbenes do not truly dimerise but rather form the dimer by reaction via formamidinium salts a protonated precursor species 30 Accordingly this reaction can be acid catalysed This reaction occurs because unlike imidazolium based carbenes there is no loss of aromaticity in protonation of the carbene Unlike the dimerisation of triplet state carbenes these singlet state carbenes do not approach head to head least motion but rather the carbene lone pair attacks the empty carbon p orbital non least motion Carbene dimerisation can be catalyzed by both acids and metals Reactivity edit The chemistry of stable carbenes has not been fully explored However Enders et al 39 54 55 have performed a range of organic reactions involving a triazol 5 ylidene These reactions are outlined below and may be considered as a model for other carbenes nbsp Reactions of triazol 5 ylidene 55 a 3 6 diphenyl 1 2 4 5 tetrazine toluene 92 e 2 equiv PhNCO toluene reflux 92 b RXH RT 95 97 f CS2 toluene or PhNCS THF RT 71 90 c O2 S8 or Se toluene reflux 54 68 g Maleimide THF RT 47 84 d R1CH CHR2 THF RT 25 68 h Dimethylacetylene dicarboxylate THF reflux 21 These carbenes tend to behave in a nucleophilic fashion e and f performing insertion reactions b addition reactions c 2 1 cycloadditions d g and h 4 1 cycloadditions a as well as simple deprotonations The insertion reactions b probably proceed via deprotonation resulting in the generation of a nucleophile XR which can attack the generated salt giving the impression of a H X insertion The reported stable isothiazole carbene 2b derived from an isothiazolium perchlorate 1 56 was questioned 57 The researchers were only able to isolate 2 imino 2H thiete 4 The intermediate 3 was proposed through a rearrangement reaction The carbene 2b is no longer considered as stable 58 nbsp Isothiazole carbene 2b was proved to be unstable 57 Carbene complexation edit Imidazol 2 ylidenes triazol 5 ylidenes and less so diaminocarbenes have been shown to coordinate to a plethora of elements from alkali metals main group elements transition metals and even lanthanides and actinides A periodic table of elements gives some idea of the complexes which have been prepared and in many cases these have been identified by single crystal X ray crystallography 40 59 60 Stable carbenes are believed to behave in a similar fashion to organophosphines in their coordination properties to metals These ligands are said to be good s donors through the carbenic lone pair but poor p acceptors due to internal ligand back donation from the nitrogen atoms adjacent to the carbene centre and so are able to coordinate to even relatively electron deficient metals Enders 61 and Hermann 62 63 have shown that these carbenes are suitable replacements for phosphine ligands in several catalytic cycles Whilst they have found that these ligands do not activate the metal catalyst as much as phosphine ligands they often result in more robust catalysts Several catalytic systems have been looked into by Hermann and Enders using catalysts containing imidazole and triazole carbene ligands with moderate success 59 61 62 63 Grubbs 64 has reported replacing a phosphine ligand PCy3 with an imidazol 2 ylidene in the olefin metathesis catalyst RuCl2 PCy3 2CHPh and noted increased ring closing metathesis as well as exhibiting a remarkable air and water stability Molecules containing two and three carbene moieties have been prepared as potential bidentate and tridentate carbene ligands 37 38 vtePeriodic table Persistent carbeneGroup 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Period1 1H 2He2 3Li 4Be 5B 6C 7N 8O 9F 10Ne3 11Na 12Mg 13Al 14Si 15P 16S 17Cl 18Ar4 19K 20Ca 21Sc 22Ti 23V 24Cr 25Mn 26Fe 27Co 28Ni 29Cu 30Zn 31Ga 32Ge 33As 34Se 35Br 36Kr5 37Rb 38Sr 39Y 40Zr 41Nb 42Mo 43Tc 44Ru 45Rh 46Pd 47Ag 48Cd 49In 50Sn 51Sb 52Te 53I 54Xe6 55Cs 56Ba nbsp 71Lu 72Hf 73Ta 74W 75Re 76Os 77Ir 78Pt 79Au 80Hg 81Tl 82Pb 83Bi 84Po 85At 86Rn7 87Fr 88Ra nbsp 103Lr 104Rf 105Db 106Sg 107Bh 108Hs 109Mt 110Ds 111Rg 112Cn 113Nh 114Fl 115Mc 116Lv 117Ts 118Og nbsp 57La 58Ce 59Pr 60Nd 61Pm 62Sm 63Eu 64Gd 65Tb 66Dy 67Ho 68Er 69Tm 70Yb nbsp 89Ac 90Th 91Pa 92U 93Np 94Pu 95Am 96Cm 97Bk 98Cf 99Es 100Fm 101Md 102NoLegend Carbene complex with element known No carbene complex with element knownCarbenes in organometallic chemistry amp catalysis edit Carbenes can be stabilised as organometallic species These transition metal carbene complexes fall into two categories citation needed Fischer carbenes in which carbenes are tethered to a metal and an electron withdrawing group usually a carbonyl Schrock carbenes in which carbenes are tethered to a metal and an electron donating group The reactions that such carbenes participate in are very different from those in which organic carbenes participate Triplet state carbene chemistry edit Persistent triplet state carbenes are likely to have very similar reactivity as other non persistent triplet state carbenes Physical properties edit nbsp Carbene peak in 13C NMRThose carbenes that have been isolated to date tend to be colorless solids with low melting points These carbenes tend to sublime at low temperatures under high vacuum One of the more useful physical properties is the diagnostic chemical shift of the carbenic carbon atom in the 13C NMR spectrum Typically this peak is in the range between 200 and 300 ppm where few other peaks appear in the 13C NMR spectrum An example is shown on the left for a cyclic diaminocarbene which has a carbenic peak at 238 ppm Upon coordination to metal centers the 13C carbene resonance usually shifts highfield depending on the Lewis acidity of the complex fragment Based on this observation Huynh et al developed a new methodology to determine ligand donor strengths by 13C NMR analysis of trans palladium II carbene complexes The use of a 13C labeled N heterocyclic carbene ligand also allows for the study of mixed carbene phosphine complexes which undergo trans cis isomerization due to the trans effect 65 Applications edit nbsp A second generation Grubbs catalyst NHCs are widely used as ancillary ligand in organometallic chemistry One practical application is the ruthenium based Grubbs catalyst and NHC Palladium Complexes for cross coupling reactions 66 67 68 NHC metal complexes specifically Ag I NHC complexes have been widely tested for their biological applications 69 Preparation methods editNHCs are often strongly basic the pKa value of the conjugate acid of an imidazol 2 ylidene was measured at ca 24 49 and react with oxygen Clearly these reactions are performed using air free techniques avoiding compounds of even moderate acidity Although imidazolium salts are stable to nucleophilic addition other non aromatic salts are not i e formamidinium salts 70 In these cases strong unhindered nucleophiles are avoided whether they are generated in situ or are present as an impurity in other reagents such as LiOH in BuLi Several approaches have been developed in order to prepare stable carbenes these are outlined below Deprotonation edit Deprotonation of carbene precursor salts with strong bases has proved a reliable route to almost all stable carbenes nbsp Deprotonation of precursor salts to give stable carbenes Imidazol 2 ylidenes and dihydroimidazol 2 ylidenes such IMes have been prepared by the deprotonation of the respective imidazolium and dihydroimidazolium salts The acyclic carbenes 28 31 and the tetrahydropyrimidinyl 40 based carbenes were prepared by deprotonation using strong homogeneous bases Several bases and reaction conditions have been employed with varying success The degree of success has been principally dependent on the nature of the precursor being deprotonated The major drawback with this method of preparation is the problem of isolation of the free carbene from the metals ions used in their preparation Metal hydride bases edit One might believe that sodium or potassium hydride 27 33 would be the ideal base for deprotonating these precursor salts The hydride should react irreversibly with the loss of hydrogen to give the desired carbene with the inorganic by products and excess hydride being removed by filtration In practice this reaction is often too slow requiring the addition of DMSO or t BuOH 18 26 These reagents generate soluble catalysts which increase the rate of reaction of this heterogeneous system via the generation of tert butoxide or dimsyl anion However these catalysts have proved ineffective for the preparation of non imidazolium adducts as they tend to act as nucleophiles towards the precursor salts and in so doing are destroyed The presence of hydroxide ions as an impurity in the metal hydride could also destroy non aromatic salts Deprotonation with sodium or potassium hydride in a mixture of liquid ammonia THF at 40 C has been reported 36 for imidazole based carbenes Arduengo and coworkers 33 managed to prepare a dihydroimidazol 2 ylidene using NaH However this method has not been applied to the preparation of diaminocarbenes In some cases potassium tert butoxide can be employed without the addition of a metal hydride 26 Alkyllithiums edit The use of alkyllithiums as strong bases 18 has not been extensively studied and have been unreliable for deprotonation of precursor salts With non aromatic salts n BuLi and PhLi can act as nucleophiles whilst t BuLi can on occasion act as a source of hydride reducing the salt with the generation of isobutene nbsp Reduction of formamidinium salts with tert butyllithiumAmides bases edit Lithium amides like the diisopropylamide LDA and the tetramethylpiperidide LiTMP 28 31 generally work well for the deprotonation of all types of salts providing that not too much LiOH is present in the n butyllithium used to make the lithium amide Titration of lithium amide can be used to determine the amount of hydroxide in solution The deprotonation of precursor salts with metal hexamethyldisilazides 40 works very cleanly for the deprotonation of all types of salts except for unhindered formamidinium salts where this base can act as a nucleophile to give a triaminomethane adduct Metal free carbene preparation edit nbsp Stable carbenes readily coordinate to metals in this case a diaminocarbene coordinates to KHMDS to form a complex The preparation of stable carbenes free from metal cations has been keenly sought to allow further study of the carbene species in isolation from these metals Separating a carbene from a carbene metal complex can be problematic due to the stability of the complex Accordingly it is preferable to make the carbene free from these metals in the first place Indeed some metal ions rather than stabilising the carbene have been implicated in the catalytic dimerisation of unhindered examples Shown right is an X ray structure showing a complex between a diaminocarbene and potassium HMDS This complex was formed when excess KHMDS was used as a strong base to deprotonate the formamidinium salt Removing lithium ions resulting from deprotonation with reagents such as lithium diisopropylamide LDA can be especially problematic Potassium and sodium salt by products tend to precipitate from solution and can be removed Lithium ions may be chemically removed by binding to species such as cryptands or crown ethers Metal free carbenes have been prepared in several ways as outlined below Dechalcogenation edit Another approach of preparing carbenes has relied on the desulfurisation of thioureas with potassium in THF 29 71 A contributing factor to the success of this reaction is that the byproduct potassium sulfide is insoluble in the solvent The elevated temperatures suggest that this method is not suitable for the preparation of unstable dimerising carbenes A single example of the deoxygenation of a urea with a fluorene derived carbene to give the tetramethyldiaminocarbene and fluorenone has also been reported 72 nbsp Preparation of carbenes by dechalcogenationThe desulfurisation of thioureas with molten potassium to give imidazol 2 ylidenes or diaminocarbenes has not been widely used The method was used to prepare dihydroimidazole carbenes 29 Vacuum pyrolysis edit Vacuum pyrolysis with the removal of neutral volatile byproducts i e methanol or chloroform has been used to prepare dihydroimidazole and triazole based carbenes Historically the removal of chloroform by vacuum pyrolysis of adducts A was used by Wanzlick 8 in his early attempts to prepare dihydroimidazol 2 ylidenes but this method is not widely used The Enders laboratory 39 has used vacuum pyrolysis of adduct B to generate a triazol 5 ylidene nbsp Preparation of carbenes via vacuum pyrolysis Bis trimethylsilyl mercury edit Bis trimethylsilyl mercury CH3 3Si Hg Si CH3 3 reacts with chloro iminium and chloro amidinium salts to give a metal free carbene and elemental mercury 73 For example CH3 3Si Hg Si CH3 3 R2N C Cl NR 2 Cl R2N C NR2 Hg l 2 CH3 3SiClPhotochemical decomposition edit Persistent triplet state carbenes have been prepared by photochemical decomposition of a diazomethane product via the expulsion of nitrogen gas at a wavelength of 300 nm in benzene Purification edit nbsp Sublimation of a carbene Stable carbenes are very reactive and so the minimum amount of handling is desirable using air free techniques However provided rigorously dry relatively non acidic and air free materials are used stable carbenes are reasonably robust to handling per se By way of example a stable carbene prepared from potassium hydride can be filtered through a dry celite pad to remove excess KH and resulting salts from the reaction On a relatively small scale a suspension containing a stable carbene in solution can be allowed to settle and the supernatant solution pushed through a dried membrane syringe filter Stable carbenes are readily soluble in non polar solvents such as hexane and so typically recrystallisation of stable carbenes can be difficult due to the unavailability of suitable non acidic polar solvents Air free sublimation as shown right can be an effective method of purification although temperatures below 60 C under high vacuum are preferable as these carbenes are relatively volatile and also could begin to decompose at these higher temperatures Indeed sublimation in some cases can give single crystals suitable for X ray analysis However strong complexation to metal ions like lithium will in most cases prevent sublimation References edit Hopkinson M N Richter C Schedler M Glorius F 2014 An Overview of N Heterocyclic Carbenes Nature 510 7506 485 496 Bibcode 2014Natur 510 485H doi 10 1038 nature13384 PMID 24965649 S2CID 672379 Ronald Breslow 1957 Mechanism of Thiamine Action Participation of a Thiazolium Zwitterion Chem Ind 26 893 Ronald Breslow 1958 On the Mechanism of Thiamine Action IV 1 Evidence from Studies on Model Systems J Am Chem Soc 80 14 3719 3726 doi 10 1021 ja01547a064 R Breslow 1957 Rapid Deuterium Exchange in Thiazolium Salts J Am Chem Soc 79 7 1762 1763 doi 10 1021 ja01564a064 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olefin metathesis catalysts coordinated with imidazolin 2 ylidene ligands Tetrahedron Lett 40 12 2247 2250 doi 10 1016 S0040 4039 99 00217 8 Han Vinh Huynh et al 2009 13C NMR Spectroscopic Determination of Ligand Donor Strengths Using N Heterocyclic Carbene Complexes of Palladium II Organometallics 28 18 5395 5404 doi 10 1021 om900667d S P Nolan editor 2006 N Heterocyclic carbenes in synthesis Wiley VCH ISBN 3 527 31400 8 F Glorius editor 2007 N Heterocyclic carbenes in transition metal catalysis Springer ISBN 3 540 36929 5 Diez Gonzalez Silvia Marion Nicolas Nolan Steven P 2009 08 12 N Heterocyclic Carbenes in Late Transition Metal Catalysis Chem Rev 109 8 3612 3676 doi 10 1021 cr900074m ISSN 0009 2665 PMID 19588961 S2CID 206902952 Garrison Jered C Youngs Wiley J 2005 Ag I N Heterocyclic Carbene Complexes Synthesis Structure and Application Chem Rev 105 11 3978 4008 doi 10 1021 cr050004s PMID 16277368 S2CID 43090499 Roger W Alder Michael E Blake Simone Bufali Craig P Butts A Guy Orpen Jan Schutz Stuart J Williams 2001 Preparation of tetraalkylformamidinium salts and related species as precursors to stable carbenes J Chem Soc Perkin Trans 1 14 1586 1593 doi 10 1039 b104110j N Kuhn T Kratz 1993 Synthesis of Imidazol 2 ylidenes by Reduction of Imidazole 2 3H thiones Synthesis 1993 6 561 562 doi 10 1055 s 1993 25902 D Kovacs M S Lee D Olson J E Jackson 1996 Carbene to Carbene Oxygen Atom Transfer J Am Chem Soc 118 34 8144 8145 doi 10 1021 ja961324j Michael Otto Salvador Conejero Yves Canac Vadim D Romanenko Valentyn Rudzevitch Guy Bertrand 2004 Mono and Diaminocarbenes from Chloroiminium and amidinium Salts Synthesis of Metal Free Bis dimethylamino carbene J Am Chem Soc 126 4 1016 1017 doi 10 1021 ja0393325 PMID 14746458 Further reading editReviews on persistent carbenes Hopkinson M N Richter C Schedler M Glorius F 2014 An Overview of N Heterocyclic Carbenes Nature 510 7506 485 496 Bibcode 2014Natur 510 485H doi 10 1038 nature13384 PMID 24965649 S2CID 672379 Carbene Chemistry From Fleeting Intermediates to Powerful Reagents Chapter 4 Hideo Tomioka triplet state Chapter 5 singlet state Roger W Alder ed Guy Bertrand Reactive Intermediate Chemistry By Robert A Moss Matthew Platz Maitland Jones Chapter 8 Stable Singlet Carbenes Guy Bertrand R W Alder in Diaminocarbenes exploring structure and reactivity ed G Bertrand New York 2002 M Regitz 1996 Stable Carbenes Illusion or Reality Angew Chem Int Ed 30 6 674 676 doi 10 1002 anie 199106741 For a review on the physico chemical properties electronics sterics of N heterocyclic carbenes T Droge F Glorius 2010 The Measure of All Rings N Heterocyclic Carbenes Angew Chem Int Ed 49 39 6940 6952 doi 10 1002 anie 201001865 PMID 20715233 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Persistent carbene amp oldid 1210670683, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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