We report an original alkane elimination approach, entailing the protonolysis of triisobutylaluminum by the acidic hydrides from Cp*IrH. This strategy allows access to a series of well-defined tri- and tetranuclear iridium aluminum polyhydride clusters, depending on the stoichiometry: [Cp*IrHAl(Bu)] (), [Cp*IrHAl(Bu)] (), [(Cp*IrH)Al(Bu)] (), and [(Cp*IrH)Al] (). Contrary to most transition-metal aluminohydride complexes, which can be considered as [AlH] aluminates and LnM moieties, the situation here is reversed: These complexes have original structures that are best described as [Cp*IrH] iridate units surrounding cationic Al(III) fragments. This is corroborated by reactivity studies, which show that the hydrides are always retained at the iridium sites and that the [Cp*IrH] moieties are labile and can be transmetalated to yield potassium ([KIrCp*H], ) or silver (([AgIrCp*H], ) derivatives of potential synthetic interest. DFT calculations show that the bonding situation can vary in these systems, from 3-center 2-electron hydride-bridged Lewis adducts of the form Ir-H⇀Al to direct polarized metal-metal interaction from donation of -electrons of Ir to the Al metal, and both types of interactions take place to some extent in each of these clusters.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.1c03120 | DOI Listing |
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