Phosphine oxides and arsine oxides are common laboratory reagents with diverse applications that stem from the chemistry exhibited by these monomeric species. Stibine oxides are, in contrast, generally dimeric or oligomeric species because of the reactivity-quenching self-association of the highly polarized stiboryl (Sb=O/Sb-O) group. We recently isolated DippSbO (Dipp = 2,6-diisopropylphenyl), the first example of a kinetically stabilized monomeric stibine oxide, which exists as a bench-stable solid and bears an unperturbed stiboryl group. Herein, we report the isolation of MesSbO (Mes = mesityl), in which the less bulky substituents maintain the monomeric nature of the compound but unlock access to a wider range of reactivity at the unperturbed stiboryl group relative to DippSbO. MesSbO was found to be a potent Lewis base in the formation of adducts with the main-group Lewis acids PbMeCl and SnMeCl. The accessible Lewis acidity at the Sb atom results in a change in the reactivity with GeMeCl, SiMeCl, and CPhCl. With these species, MesSbO formally adds the E-Cl (E = Ge, Si, C) bond across the unsaturated stiboryl group to form a 5-coordinate stiborane. The biphilicity of MesSbO is sufficiently potent to activate even the C-F and Si-F bonds of C(-MeOPh)F and SiEtF, respectively. These results mark a significant contribution to an increasingly rich literature on the reactivity of polar, unsaturated main-group motifs. Furthermore, these results highlight the utility of a kinetic stabilization approach to access unusual bonding motifs with unquenched reactivity that can be leveraged for small-molecule activation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.4c05394 | DOI Listing |
J Am Chem Soc
July 2024
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, California 95064, United States.
Phosphine oxides and arsine oxides are common laboratory reagents with diverse applications that stem from the chemistry exhibited by these monomeric species. Stibine oxides are, in contrast, generally dimeric or oligomeric species because of the reactivity-quenching self-association of the highly polarized stiboryl (Sb=O/Sb-O) group. We recently isolated DippSbO (Dipp = 2,6-diisopropylphenyl), the first example of a kinetically stabilized monomeric stibine oxide, which exists as a bench-stable solid and bears an unperturbed stiboryl group.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Chem
May 2023
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA, USA.
In contrast to phosphine oxides and arsine oxides, which are common and exist as stable monomeric species featuring the corresponding pnictoryl functional group (Pn=O/Pn-O; Pn = P, As), stibine oxides are generally polymeric, and the properties of the unperturbed stiboryl group (Sb=O/Sb-O) remain unexplored. We now report the isolation of the monomeric stibine oxide, DippSbO (where Dipp = 2,6-diisopropylphenyl). Spectroscopic, crystallographic and computational studies provide insight into the nature of the Sb=O/Sb-O bond.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Commun (Camb)
April 2021
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA.
Attempts to investigate the properties and reactivity of the stiboryl moiety (RSb-O or RSb[double bond, length as m-dash]O), as in monomeric stibine oxides free of interaction with Lewis acids/bases, led us to conclude that this functional group remains undiscovered. X-ray crystallographic, computational, and spectroscopic data indicate that previously proposed H-bonded stibine oxide adducts MesSbOHOSR are in fact hydroxystibonium salts [MesSbOH][RSO].
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