Reductive Dimerization of CO by a Na/Mg(I) Diamide

Sodium reduction of [{SiNDipp}Mg] [{SiNDipp} = {CH2SiMe2N(Dipp)}2; Dipp = 2,6-i-Pr2C6H3] provides the Mg(I) species, [{SiNDipp}MgNa]2, in which the long Mg–Mg bond (>3.2 Å) is augmented by persistent Na–aryl interactions. Computational assessment indicates that this molecule is best considered to comprise a contiguous tetrametallic core, a viewpoint borne out by its reaction with CO, which results in ethynediolate formation mediated by the dissimilar metal centers.


■ INTRODUCTION
Prior to Jones and co-workers' isolation of stable guanidinate and β-diketiminate (BDI) derivatives such as compound 1 in 2007 (Chart 1), 1−5 experimental studies of low oxidation state Mg(I) derivatives were limited to transient species under low temperature matrix isolation conditions. 6 Although more than 25 examples of such compounds have now been described, like 1, a majority conform to the general structural requirement of a bulky monoanionic spectator ligand to provide the requisite kinetic stabilization of the [Mg−Mg] 2+ unit against disproportionation to Mg(II) and Mg(0).
The implementation of an ever more bulky suite of amide and β-diketiminate anions, in harness with a variety of neutral mondentate bases, has, thus, resulted in the isolation of a variety of species comprising four-, 7,8 three-, 9−15 two-, 16 or even asymmetric combinations of four-and three-, 17 or threeand two-coordinate magnesium centers. 18 The intermetallic distance in these compounds has proved remarkably malleable such that the Mg−Mg bond lengths encompass an unusually wide range, with extremes provided by an N-mesityl BDI variant of 1 [2, Mg−Mg 2.808(1) Å] 8 and compound 3 [3.1962(14) Å] in which the coordination number of both magnesium atoms in 1 is raised to four through the introduction of two molecules of strongly basic 4-dimethylaminopyridine (DMAP). 7 While this deformability is consistent with a very shallow bond potential energy surface, experimental charge density studies and quantum theory of atoms-in-molecules (QTAIM) calculations revealed that the Mg−Mg bond of compound 1 is not a classical covalent interaction. Rather, a large region of negative Laplacian in the Mg−Mg internuclear region comprises a non-nuclear attractor (NNA) containing 0.8 electrons, in effect electron density that is not associated with a particular nucleus and, hence, distinct from the positions of the magnesium atoms. 9,18−20 While a pre-existing [Mg−Mg] 2+ unit has also been manipulated to provide further Mg(I) derivatives, 21,22 the synthesis of these compounds invariably involves the generation of a salt by reduction of a magnesium(II) halide starting material with either sodium or potassium. The current apotheosis of this approach has very recently been provided by Harder and co-workers' report that sodium reduction of a magnesium(II) iodide bearing the extraordinarily bulky BDI* [BDI* = HC{C(t-Bu)N(DiPeP)} 2 ; DiPeP = 2,6-(3-pentyl)phenyl] ligand provides the remarkable magnesium(0) compound, [(BDI*)MgNa] 2 (4). 23 Whereas the Mg···Mg separation [5.7792(5) Å] in 4 is too long to represent a bonding interaction, the shorter of the Mg−Na distances [3.1216(7) Å] approaches the sum of the ionic radii of the respective group 1 and group 2 metal centers (3.19 Å). 24 Compound 4 also disproportionates in benzene to provide a further Mg(0)-containing species, [(BDI*)MgMgMg(BDI*)] (5), in which the magnesium atoms were shown by QTAIM to be connected via two NNAs, each with a basin of 0.64 electrons.
An exception to this synthetic approach has been provided by Yang and co-workers' utilization of doubly reduced αdiimine, phenanthrene-9,10-diimine, and o-phenylene diamide ligand sets. 10, 14 In these cases the redox noninnocent proligands were reduced with excess potassium metal, albeit the reactions were performed in the presence of MgCl 2 and so are again driven by the thermodynamically favorable production of an ionic group 1 salt. Charge balance in the resultant Mg(I) species, such as 6, 10 is necessarily maintained by the incorporation of potassium cations. Although these cations interact strongly with the delocalized π system of the planar dianionic spectator ligands, they impose a negligible impact on the bonds between the three-coordinate Mg centers, which are <3 Å in all cases.
In contrast to the unsupported Mg−Mg bonds of compounds 1−3 and 6, a notable feature of compound 4 is the presence of bridging Na−aryl contacts, which presumably play a significant role in the stability of the dimeric molecule. 23 We, and others, have recently observed that similarly persistent Na− and K−aryl interactions provide a defining feature in a number of dimeric potassium diamidoalumanyl derivatives. 25−28 In these cases, the integrity of the formal Al(I) centers is maintained by a sterically demanding diamide ligand, such as in the seven-membered cyclic species, [{SiN Dipp } -AlK] 2 [{SiN Dipp } = {CH 2 SiMe 2 N(Dipp)} 2 ; Dipp = 2,6-i-Pr 2 C 6 H 3 ] (7). 28 Prompted by the robust nature of compounds 4 and 7, in this contribution we show that the thermodynamic preference for heavier group 1 element−aryl interactions 29,30 can provide a strategy to access dinuclear low oxidation state alkaline earth species that circumvents conventional salt elimination.

■ RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Initial DFT calculations were performed to model the sodium and potassium reduction of a neutral magnesium derivative, [{SiN Dipp }Mg](8), supported by the amide ligand utilized in compound 7. While these results supported the thermodynamic viability of reduction with both alkali metals to the putative dinuclear Mg−Mg bonded species (9 Na/K , Scheme 1), the sodium-based process was calculated to be more exergonic (M = Na, ΔG = −72.3; M = K, ΔG = −63.7 kcal mol −1 ).
Encouraged by these results, compound 8 was synthesized by reaction of the aniline pro-ligand, {SiN Dipp }H 2 , with dibutyl magnesium in hexane at room temperature. Although 8 was isolated in analytically pure base-free form by removal of volatiles, it was observed to quickly sequester aromatic solvents. Compound 8 was, thus, characterized as its Mg-η 1benzene and Mg-η 1 -toluene adducts by X-ray diffraction analysis performed on colorless single crystals isolated by slow evaporation of the respective arene solutions ( Figure  S14). Guided by the greater theoretical viability of the sodium reduction, a benzene solution of 8 was reacted with an excess of 5 wt % Na/NaCl at room temperature for 12 h, 31 whereupon removal of volatiles and crystallization from toluene solution provided compound 9 as highly air-sensitive bright yellow crystals. The 1 H NMR spectrum of compound 9 was characterized by a significant asymmetry across the various {SiN Dipp } ligand environments. This was particularly apparent in the silylmethyl signals, which appeared as two (6H) singlets at δ 0.52 and −0.21 ppm, and which may be attributed to a loss of the mirror plane of symmetry through the sevenmembered magnesium chelate of 8. Notably, these resonances did not display any level of coherence transfer consistent with chemical or conformational exchange in the corresponding EXSY NMR experiment.
The origin of these observations became apparent in a subsequent single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis of compound 9, which confirmed it as a tetranuclear heterobimetallic species in which a pair of {SiN Dipp }Mg units are bridged by twofold η 6 -Na-Dipp interactions ( Figure 1). Intrinsic to the crystallographic symmetry (P1), the asymmetric unit comprises a racemate, such that the Mg1/Mg2and Mg3/Mg4-containing molecules describe right-and lefthanded helices, respectively. While there are some significant variations across the comparable metric data of both . In this latter case, the Na-coordinated and uncoordinated N-aryl substituents observed in the solid-state structure could not be discriminated by NMR spectroscopy, indicating rapid solution exchange of both sites. 23 This observation contrasts significantly with the behavior of 9, wherein a mutually gauche orientation of each dimer half in the molecule is evidently "locked" into the solid-state conformation by a combination of persistent Mg−Mg and Na-Dipp interactions. As a result, the enantiomers observed in the solid-state structure cannot interconvert, imposing the loss of symmetry across the various {SiN Dipp } ligand environments implied by NMR spectroscopy.
Insight into the electron densities and, in turn, the nature of the interatomic interactions within compound 9, was obtained with QTAIM topological analysis. The Mg−Mg bond critical point (ρ = 0.0194) has a negative energy density (H(r) = −0.00362) and Laplacian (∇ 2 ρ(r) = −0.0136) which are indicative of a stabilizing covalent bond (Figure 2a). This is further supported by NBO analysis through the identification of a natural localized molecular orbital of a Mg−Mg σ-bond with a roughly equal contribution from the 3s orbitals of each Mg center (Figure 2b). In contrast to comparable calculations performed on monometallic species such as 1 and 5, 19,20 no persuasive evidence of a NNA could be identified. Rather, QTAIM analysis revealed two further weak bond critical points (where ρ = 0.0034) between the Na cations and the Mg−Mg bond critical point itself. Perturbation energy analysis of this unusual interaction with both Na + cations estimates an overall σ-donation strength between the Mg−Mg bond and each Na + cation of ΔE (2) ≈ 25 kcal mol −1 .
Magnesium(I) complexes comprising an isolated Mg−Mg interaction have displayed broad applicability as soluble molecular reducing agents. 4 The QTAIM and NBO results suggest, however, that the chemistry of 9 is better considered in terms of its [Na 2 Mg 2 ] 4+ core rather than as an isolated [Mg−Mg] 2+ unit. This raises the possibility that new patterns of cooperative reactivity may arise between the dissimilar metal centers. Treatment of molten alkali metals or their solutions in liquid ammonia with gaseous CO have long been known to give rise to ill-defined and shock-sensitive mixtures of oxocarbon anions, [C n O n ] 2− (n = 2−6). 32 35 As an initial assay of its reactivity, therefore, a solution of compound 9 in benzene was treated with 2 atm of 13 CO at room temperature. The conversion of 9 was complete after 3 days to provide the quantitative generation of a single new species (10). The formation of compound 10 was characterized by the loss of asymmetry associated with the {SiN Dipp } ligand environments of 9 in the resultant 1 H NMR spectrum and, most characteristically, the emergence of a single new 13 Cenriched resonance at δ 50.2 ppm in the corresponding 13 C{ 1 H} NMR spectrum. Although the carbon centers of Jones' [C 3 O 3 ] 2− dianions were not observed spectroscopically for comparison, 17 this latter chemical shift is redolent of Evans' and co-workers' observation of the ethynediolate 13 C nuclei of [{(Me 3 Si) 2 N} 3 Y(μ-OCCO)Y{N(SiMe 3 ) 2 } 3 ][K(18-cr-6)-(THF) 2 ] 2 (11, δ 55.5 ppm), in which two molecules of CO were reductively dimerized by the Y 2+ centers produced in situ by addition of excess potassium to [Y{N(SiMe 3 ) 2 } 3 ]. 36 Although analogous behavior has also been observed for similarly generated divalent Lu, 36 Dy, Ho, Gd, and Tm 37 systems, and is precedented in uranium(III) reactivity, 38−42 compound 11 provides the sole diamagnetic example of an ethynediolate anion for comparison and strongly advocates the operation of a similar process during the reaction of CO with 9 (Scheme 2). This thesis was confirmed by the X-ray diffraction analysis of 10, single crystals of which were obtained by slow evaporation of a hexane solution at room temperature. Although cis- 1.9714 Å], which supports a change in formal Mg oxidation state from +1 to +2. This latter deduction was further supported by QTAIM and NBO analyses of the electronic structure and bonding interactions within 10. QTAIM analysis revealed strong BCPs between each Mg center and the O termini of the {O−CC−O} 2− moiety (ρ Mg3−O10 = 0.0506, ρ Mg4−O9 = 0.05182) as well as two between the Na + ions and the O termini (ρ Na7−O10 = 0.0232, ρ Na6−O9 = 0.0238). Donor-acceptor NBO energy analysis also afforded further support to the η 3 -C−C−O binding mode between the Na + ions and the {O− CC−O} 2− moiety.
The mechanism of formation of 10 was also interrogated by DFT calculations (Figure 4). In a manner reminiscent of that computed for the generation of Jones and Maron's deltate ([C 3 O 3 ] 2− ) derivatives, the addition of CO occurs sequentially. 17,34 The transformation of 9 to 10 is significantly exergonic (ΔG = −65.2 kcal mol −1 ) and each stage of the reaction profile invokes cooperative interactions between CO and both dissimilar metals of the [Na 2 Mg 2 ] unit. Consistent with the slow formation of 10, the kinetic barrier associated with the initial CO insertion [TS(9-A)], involving a single Mg and a single Na of 9 and the generation of a Mg−μ-C−O−μ-Na bridging interaction, is quite high and rate limiting (28.2 kcal mol −1 ). Although the formation of the resultant species (A) is endergonic (ΔG = +15.0 kcal mol −1 ), the overall exergonicity of CO insertion (ΔG = −10.0 kcal mol −1 ) is ensured by its rapid isomerization to species B, in which a doubly reduced molecule of CO interacts with all four alkaline metal centers. Sequestration of a further molecule of CO by B to provide C and subsequent C−C coupling are then facile to provide 10, in which the (μ-OCCO) unit is encapsulated  Journal of the American Chemical Society pubs.acs.org/JACS Article and protected toward further oligomerization by the [Na 2 Mg 2 ] 2+ unit. In summary, sodium reduction of a neutral diamidomagnesium provides a Mg(I) species in which the long Mg−Mg interaction is augmented by persistent Na−aryl interactions. Computational assessment indicates that the molecule is best considered to comprise a contiguous tetrametallic core, a viewpoint borne out by its reaction with CO, which results in ethynediolate formation mediated by the dissimilar metal centers. We are continuing to study this reactivity, particularly as a strategy to allow the isolation of low oxidation state derivatives of magnesium's heavier group 2 congeners. ■ ASSOCIATED CONTENT * sı Supporting Information The Supporting Information is available free of charge at https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/jacs.1c09467.