Stabilization of copper(III) complexes by disubstituted oxamides and related ligands
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) in J. Chem. Soc., Dalton Trans.
- No. 5,p. 745-752
- https://doi.org/10.1039/a607572j
Abstract
The electrochemical behaviour of a family of monomeric copper(II) complexes of the related tetraanionic chelating ligands N,N′-o-phenylenebis(oxamate) (L 1 ) and its methylamide (L 2 ) and bis(methylamide) (L 3 ) has been investigated by cyclic voltammetry in acetonitrile at 25 °C and 0.1 mol dm -3 NEt 4 ClO 4 as supporting electrolyte. The copper(III)–copper(II) reduction potentials have been found to span a potential range from +0.41 to -0.02 V (vs. saturated calomel electrode), being reversible for all cases except the copper(II)–L 1 complex. The trend in formal potentials along this series is explained in terms of the stronger donor properties of the deprotonated-amido nitrogen atoms than those of the carboxylate oxygen ones. Hence, the stabilization of the trivalent oxidation state of copper is attributed to the increasing number of deprotonated-amido donor groups. A perfect correlation has been observed within this family between the Cu III –Cu II potentials and the visible absorption maxima of the copper(II) complexes. The relative gain in crystal-field stabilization energy for the change from the d 9 (Cu II , square planar) to the low-spin d 8 (Cu III , square-planar) electronic configuration is the main factor in the overall thermodynamic stability of the copper(III) complexes. The molecular structure of the stable copper(III) complex [PPh 4 ][CuL 3 ]·MeCN has been determined by single-crystal X-ray analysis. The metal is in a nearly square-planar environment formed by the four amido nitrogen atoms of the chelating ligand, with short Cu–N bond distances (1.84–1.88 Å) typical of trivalent copper.Keywords
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