Abstract
The use of pincer ligands to access non-VSEPR
geometries at main-group centers is an emerging strategy for eliciting new
stoichiometric and catalytic reactivity. As part of this effort, several
different tridentate trianionic substituents have to date been employed at a
range of different central elements, providing a patchwork dataset that
precludes rigorous structure-function correlation. Here we report an analysis
of periodic trends in structure (solid, solution, and gas phase), bonding, and
reactivity based on systematic variation of the central element (P, As, Sb, or
Bi) with retention of a single tridentate triamide substituent. In this
homologous series, the central element can adopt either a bent or planar
geometry. The tendency to adopt planar geometries increases descending the
group with the phosphorus triamide (1) and its arsenic congener (2)
exhibiting bent conformations, and the antimony (3) and bismuth (4)
analogues exhibiting a predominantly planar structure in solution. This trend
has been rationalized using the energy decomposition analysis. A rare
phase-dependent dynamic covalent dimerization was observed for 3 and the
associated thermodynamic parameters were established quantitatively. Planar
geometries were found to engender lower LUMO energies and smaller band gaps as
compared to bent ones, resulting in different reactivity patterns. These
results provide a benchmark dataset to guide further research in this rapidly
emerging area.
Supplementary materials
Title
ESI-Group15Triamides-arxiv
Description
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