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Synthesis and Investigation of Borylene Complexes: from Borylene Transfer to Borylene Catenation
(2012)
Within the scope of this thesis, the area of borylene transfer has been broadened by including transition-metal alkynyl complexes and metal-carbon double bonds as borylene acceptors. In addition to double salt elimination, halide abstraction and dehydrogenation processes, a novel high-yield synthetic procedure for terminal borylene complexes was established, i.e. salt elimination and subsequent silylhalogenide liberation. Accordingly, it was possible to prepare [(OC)3(Me3P)Fe=BDur] as a rare example of a neutral arylborylene species. Moreover, this compound has been demonstrated to possess great potential for metathesis reactions and the functionalization of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons such as naphthalene. Moreover, it could undergo a phosphine-borylene exchange reaction, yielding the iron bis(borylene) complex [(OC)3Fe(BDur){BN(SiMe3)2}], which has turned out to be applicable for preparation of 1,4-diboracyclohexadiene and unprecedented 1,4-dibora-1,3-butadiene complexes, thus establishing a new type of borylene transfer. Most interestingly, upon transfer of further borylene moieties into the coordination sphere of iron, borylene-catenation was accomplished in a highly controlled manner.
Within this thesis, the analysis and hence the better comprehension of the chemical bond within metal–element compounds is the central topic. By use of various DFT methods a selection of M–E interactions have been modeled and analyzed via Bader’s QTAIM, the ELF and NBO techniques. Special focus was set on a series of transition metal borylene and carbene complexes, and the Li–C bonds as representatives for main group organometallics. Therefore, this thesis is split into three parts:(I) An introduction reviewing the quantum chemical machinery as well as the analysis tools applied for the evaluation of chemical bonds. (II) Within the second part the chemical interactions taking place in transition metal complexes are studied focusing on borylenes and cognate carbenes. (III) In Part III, a broad overview of the appropriate modeling and nature of the Li–C bond as well as intermolecular interactions in methyllithium is provided.