Lecture 20.
An introduction to
  organometallic chemistry
benzene
                        The sandwich
                          complex of
   Cr(0)                Cr(0), which is
                        [Cr(benzene)2]
benzene
        Organometallic complexes.
Organometallic complexes are strictly those that contain a metal
to carbon bond, but also include a large number where the donor
atoms are only such soft donor atoms as P or S. Typically, such
complexes involve very soft ligands, and very soft metal ions in
low oxidation states. We thus saw on the slide above the
complex of Cr(0) with two benzene ligands. Important ligands for
organometallic complexes in this course are:
CO The carbonyl ligand
PR3 The phosphines, where R is, for example CH3 or
-C6H5 (trimethyl phosphine and triphenylphosphine).
ethylenes, butadiene, cyclooctadiene, cycopentadienyl anion:
        butadiene   cyclooctadiene (COT) cyclooctatetraene (COD) cyclopentadienyl
                                                                     anion
              Early organometallics:
   Until fifty years ago, organometallic chemistry was
   restricted to a few oddities that were hard to understand.
   For example, [Ni(CO)4] has been known since at least
   1889 , when it was used in the Mond process for
   production of ultrapure Ni. Ni is the only metal that will
   react directly with CO to produce a carbonyl, which is
   actually volatile, aiding separation of Ni from other metals.
                                  It was known that PdCl2 would
               Cl     ethylene    react with ethylene to give a
               Pd    Cl           compound that analyzed as
                                  PdCl2.CH2=CH2. But why? We
                                  now know that the structure is
                  Pd              as at left, but why does the
           Cl
                                  CH2=CH2 bind to the Pd? We
[PdCl2.CH2=CH2]2 Cl               will look at some of this chemistry
              Carbonyl complexes
The carbonyl ligand forms a huge number of complexes
with metal ions, most commonly in low oxidation states,
where it binds to the metal through its C-donor, as in the
complexes below, where all the metal ions are zero-valent:
  [Ni(CO)4]            [Fe(CO)5]          [Cr(CO)6]
       Td               TBP (D3h)             Oh
Carbonyl complexes and the 18-electron rule
One might wonder why in the above complexes Ni(0) has
four CO groups attached to it, Fe(0) five CO, and Cr(0)
six CO. A very simple rule allows us to predict the
numbers of donor groups attached to metal ions in
organometallic complexes, called the eighteen electron
rule. The latter rule states that the sum of the d-electrons
possessed by the metal plus those donated by the ligands
(2 per CO) must total eighteen:
[Ni(CO)4]                     [Fe(CO)5]         [Cr(CO)6]
Ni(0) =       d10             Fe(0) =      d8   Cr(0) =   d6
4 x CO =      8               5 x CO      10    6 x CO = 12
             18 e                         18e            18e
Formal oxidation states are all zero.
  Carbonyl complexes and the 18-electron rule
   To obey the 18-electron rule, many carbonyl complexes
   are anions or cations, as in:
   [V(CO)6]-          [Mn(CO)6]+          [Fe(CO)4]2-
   V(0) = d5          Mn(0) = d7          Fe(0) = d8
   6 CO = 12e          6 CO = 12e          4 CO = 8e
   1-   = +1e         1+    = -1e         2-     = 2e
          = 18e              = 18 e              = 18e
   Formal oxidation   Formal oxidation    Formal oxidation
   state = V(-I)      state = Mn(I)       state = Fe(-II)
[NOTE: In applying the 18-electron rule, metal ions are always
   considered to be zero-valent, not the formal oxidn. state]
Metal-Metal bonding in Carbonyl complexes
 A species such as [Mn(CO)5] would have only 17 e. The
 18e rule can be obeyed by two such entities forming a
 Mn-Mn bond, where each Mn contributes one electron to
 the valence shell of the other Mn, giving the metal-metal
 bonded species [(CO)5Mn-Mn(CO)5]. To check on the
 18e rule, we look at one metal at a time:
Mn-Mn                               Mn(0) = d7
 bond                               5 CO = 10
                    Mn              Mn-Mn = 1
        Mn
                                            18 e
                      [Mn2(CO)10]
Metal carbonyl metal-metal bonded
            clusters:
                   Here we see a Rhodium
                   tetramer where each Rh
                   forms three Rh-Rh bonds
                   to the other Rh atoms.
                   18-electron rule: Focus
                   on one Rh atom:
                   Rh(0)          = d9
                   3 CO per Rh    = 6
                   3 Rh-Rh bonds: = 3
                                    18e
  [Rh3(CO)12]
Bridging Carbonyls in carbonyl complexes
    bridging         Carbonyls may form bridges
   carbonyls         between two metals, where
                     they donate one electron to
                     each metal in working out the
  Co           Co    18 electron rule. In [Co2(CO)8]
                     at left each Co has three
                     terminal COs, two bridging
                     COs, and a Co-Co bond:
       Co-Co
       bond          Co(0)             =      d9
                     3 COs            =      6
 [Co2(CO)8]          2 bridge COs     =      2
                     Co-Co bond        =      1
                                             18 e
  Bridging Carbonyls in Fe2(CO)9
        bridging
                   Fe2(CO)9 has each Fe with
       carbonyls   three terminal COs, three
                   bridging COs, and an FeFe
                   bond. The 18 electron rule
                   holds for each Fe atom as:
                   Fe(0)           =      d8
                   3 COs          =      6
                   3 bridge COs   =      3
     Fe-Fe         Fe-Fe bond      =      1
     bond
[Fe2(CO)9]                              18 e
 Charged ligands and the eighteen-electron rule
The formally charged ligands that are important in
organometallic chemistry are mainly soft ligands such as Cl-,
Br-, and I-, with CN- also occurring. Hydride (H-) is also very
important. These mono-anionic ligands all contribute one
electron for the 18-electron rule, as in the following examples:
[Mn(CO)5Cl]              [H2Fe(CO)4]          [HCo(CO)4]
Mn(0)      =      d7     Fe(0) =       d8     Co(0) = d9
5 COs     =      10     4 COs =      8      4 COs = 8
1 Cl       =       1     2H     =      2      1H     = 1
                  18 e                 18 e             18 e
Metal-Carbon bonding in carbonyl complexes
The carbonyl ligand is a -acid. This is an acid in the
Lewis sense, where it receives electrons from the
metal ion, and it is a acid because this involves -
bonding. The -bonding involves overlap of the *
orbitals of the CO with d orbitals from the t2g set of the
metal, and so is d-p bonding. The canonical
structures involved in the -acid nature of CO are:
                               +            -
           MCO                  M=C=O
                A                      B
  Metal-Carbon bonding in carbonyl complexes
What stabilizes CO complexes is MC bonding. The lower
the formal charge on the metal ion, the more willing it is to
donate electrons to the orbitals of the CO. Thus, metal ions
with higher formal charges, e.g. Fe(II) form CO complexes
with much greater difficulty than do zero-valent metal ions
such as Cr(O) and Ni(O), or negatively charged metal ions
such as V(-I). The overlap is envisaged as involving d-
orbitals of the metal and the *orbitals of the CO:
     d-p*         * orbitals of CO
     overlap
                                             orbitals of CO
d-orbital       M
of metal
      IR spectra and Metal-Carbon bonding in
                carbonyl complexes
  The CO stretching frequency of the coordinated CO is very
  informative as to the nature of the bonding. Recall that the
  stronger a bond gets, the higher its stretching frequency.
  Thus, the more important the M=C=O (C=O is a double
  bond) canonical structure, the lower the CO stretching
  frequency as compared to the M-CO structure (CO is a
  triple bond): (Note: CO for free CO is 2041 cm-1)
      [Ti(CO)6]2- [V(CO)6]- [Cr(CO)6] [Mn(CO)6]+ [Fe(CO)6]2+
CO    1748      1858         1984     2094      2204 cm-1
      increasing M=C double            decreasing M=C double
              bonding                          bonding
     IR spectra and bridging versus terminal
                    carbonyls
Bridging CO groups can be regarded as having a double bond
C=O group, as compared to a terminal CO, which is more like
a triple bond:
                                            the C=O group
 ~ triple bond             ~ double bond    in a bridging
                       M                    carbonyl is more
    M-CO                  C=O              like the C=O in
                                            a ketone, which
                        M                   typically has
 terminal carbonyl     bridging carbonyl    C=O = 1750 cm-1
 (~ 1850-2125 cm-1)   (~1700-1860 cm-1)
One can thus use the CO stretching frequencies around
1700-2200 cm-1 to detect the presence of bridging CO groups.
IR spectrum and bridging versus terminal
         carbonyls in [Fe2(CO)9]
                              O
                                    CO
                        OC
                              C
                                         CO
                                  Fe
                   OC    Fe
                              C
                              C O
                        OC             CO
      terminal                         bridging
      carbonyls                        carbonyls