Abstract
Organometallics 2021, 40, 3516-3525
Solvate-assisted grinding: metal solvates as solvent sources in mechanochemically driven organometallic reactions
DeGroot HP, Hanusa TP
Solvent effects in synthetic chemistry can be analyzed in various ways, but a possibly counterintuitive approach is to remove the solvent entirely from the reaction environment. Mechanochemical initiation (grinding or milling of solid reagents) can then be used to replace the mixing and energy that would be supplied by a solvent. The effect of complete solvent elimination can be unpredictable, however, and even partial removal, as found in the realm of liquid-assisted grinding (LAG), can alter reaction outcomes profoundly. Reduced quantities of solvents can also be present in the form of solvates, and although their use has been classified under the category of “neat” or “dry” grinding, “solvate-assisted grinding” (SAG) might be a more descriptive term, as the outcome of such reactions can differ from those of both LAG and neat grinding, with the latter term more properly restricted to the use of anhydrous or unsolvated reagents only. This study examines the mechanochemically driven synthesis of the bis(allyl)metal complexes [MA?2] (M = Cr, Fe, Co, Ni; A? = 1,3-(SiMe3)2C3H3) via halide metathesis. Particular emphasis is given to the nickel-based system, whose synthesis from nickel halide solvates is compared with the same reaction using the anhydrous metal halide and either large or LAG quantities of solvent (a few microliters of solvent per milligram of reagents). The reactions employing solvate-assisted grinding, either alone (e.g., with [Ni(py)4Cl2]) or with LAG amounts of a different solvent (e.g., with [Ni(dme)Br2] and THF as the LAG solvent) yield the nickel allyl complex the most efficiently, suggesting that the intimate interaction of coordinated solvents with the metal centers is an important variable in determining the outcome of the metathesis reactions. Although they were developed in the context of mechanochemically driven reactions, these results have implications for solution-based synthesis as well, where the use of solvated reagents can strongly affect outcomes.