Abstract
We
describe our efforts towards the design of phosphine-based ligands featuring an
electrophilic carbocationic moiety positioned to enter the secondary
coordination sphere of the phosphine-bound metal atom. Using simple synthetic protocols, we have
been able to obtain and fully characterize the complexes [(o-Ph2P(C6H4)Acr)AuCl]+
([3]+, Acr = 9-N-methylacridinium) and [(o-Ph2P(C6H4)Xan)AuCl]+
([4]+, Xan =
9-xanthylium). While only weak
interactions occur between the gold atom and the methylium centers of these
complexes, the more Lewis acidic [4]+
readily reacts with chloride to afford a trivalent phosphine gold dichloride
derivative (7) in which the metal
atom is covalently bound to the former methylium center. This anion-induced Au(I)/Au(III) oxidation is
accompanied by a conversion of the Lewis acidic methylium center in [4]+ into an X-type ligand in
7.
This transformation leads us to conclude that the methylium center acts
as a latent Z-type ligand poised to increase the Lewis acidity of the gold
center, a notion supported by the carbophilic reactivity of these complexes.