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Aqueous Organometallic Chemistry of Ruthenium(II). Aquo Carbonyl Derivatives and Related Ethene Hydrocarboxylation in Fully Aqueous Solvent

48

Citations

22

References

1999

Year

Abstract

A series of new water soluble and stable organometallic compounds is reported, and the peculiar role of water in their formation and stabilization is documented together with their catalytic properties in aqueous solution. The complex fac-Ru(OCOCF(3))(2)(CO)(3)(H(2)O) (1) constitutes the entry to a new type of aqueous organometallic chemistry. The substitution of trifluoroacetato ligands by H(2)O yields [fac-Ru(CO)(3)(H(2)O)(3)](2+) (2), isolated as the tetrafluoroborate derivative, the first structurally characterized complex bearing CO and H(2)O ligands only. In water, 2 undergoes nucleophilic attack by the solvent yielding [fac-Ru(COOH)(CO)(2)(H(2)O)(3)](+) (3), followed by CO(2) elimination to give [fac-RuH(CO)(2)(H(2)O)(3)](+) (4), a ruthenium(II) hydride devoid of group-15-donor coligands and stable toward strong acids. 4 inserts ethene in water to give [fac-Ru(C(2)H(5))(CO)(2)(H(2)O)(3)](+) (5), an exceptionally inert alkyl complex which inserts CO yielding [fac-Ru(C(O)C(2)H(5))(CO)(2)(H(2)O)(3)](+) (6). Attempts to isolate the mononuclear cationic acyl complex gave the tetranuclear Ru(4)(C(O)C(2)H(5))(4)(OH)(2)(CF(3)SO(3))(2)(CO)(8) (7). At 140 degrees C the mononuclear organometallic complexes become labile intermediates of a Reppe hydrocarboxylation of ethene in fully aqueous solvent.

References

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