Publication: Tuning the π-backbonding and σ-trans effect of N^C^N coordinated Pt(II) complexes. Kinetic and computational study
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2015-01-07
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Journal of Coordination Chemistry
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Abstract
The nucleophilic substitution reaction of cyclometallated complexes; [PtL2Cl] (L2 = 3,5-di(2-pyridinyl)-fluorobenzene), [PtL3Cl] (L3 = 2,4-di(2-pyridinyl)-fluorobenzene), and [PtL4Cl] (L4 = 3,5-di(2-pyridinyl)-toluene) with a series of neutral nucleophiles with different steric properties, thiourea (TU), N,N-dimethylthiourea (DMTU), and N,N,N′,N′-tetramethylthiourea (TMTU), was studied under pseudo-first-order conditions in methanol solution of an ionic strength of 0.1 M (0.09 M LiCF3SO3 and 0.01 M LiCl). The rate of substitution of the chloro ligand was studied as a function of nucleophile concentration and temperature using UV–visible and stopped-flow spectrophotometric techniques. The observed pseudo-first-order rate constants for the substitution reactions obey the rate law kobs = k2[Nu] + k−2. The reactivity of the investigated complexes when [PtL1Cl] is used as a reference follows the order [PtL2Cl] > [PtL3Cl] > [PtL4Cl] > [PtL1Cl]. The lability of the chloro group is dependent on the extent of π-backbonding and the σ-trans effect of the ligand backbone. [PtL2Cl] and [PtL3Cl], which have a common electron-withdrawing fluoride on the ligand trans to the leaving group, have a higher reaction rate compared to [PtL4Cl], which has an electron-donating methyl group attached to the ligand backbone. The position of the substituent on the phenyl group trans to the leaving group also influences the overlap of frontier molecular orbitals which result in controlling the reactivity of the fluoro complexes. In general, the results show that the nature of the substituent, either electron withdrawing or electron donating, results in an increase in the rate of substitution. Second-order kinetics and large negative activation entropies (ΔS#) support an associative substitution mechanism. The experimental data are supported by DFT calculations.