Organochromium chemistry is a branch of organometallic chemistry that deals with organic compounds containing a chromium to carbon bond and their reactions.[1][2] The field is of some relevance to organic synthesis. The relevant oxidation states for chromium range from -2 to +6.
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The first organochromium compound was described in 1919 by Franz Hein.[3] He treated phenylmagnesium bromide with chromium(III) chloride to give a new product (after hydrolysis) which he incorrectly identified as pentaphenyl chromium bromide (Ph5CrBr). Years later, in 1957 H.H. Zeiss et al. repeated Hein's experiments and correctly arrived at a cationic bisarene chromium sandwich compound (Ar2Cr+).[4] Bis(benzene)chromium itself was discovered around the same time in 1956 by Ernst Otto Fischer by reaction of chromium(III) chloride, benzene and aluminum chloride.[5][6] The related compound chromocene was discovered a few years earlier in 1953 also by Fischer [7].
In another development, Anet and Leblanc also in 1957 prepared a benzyl chromium solution from benzyl bromide and chromium(II) perchlorate.[8] This reaction involves one-electron oxidative addition of the carbon-bromine bond, a process which was shown by Kochi[9][10] to be a case of double single electron transfer, first to give the benzyl free radical and then to the benzyl anion.
G. Wilke et al. introduced tris-(η-allyl)chromium in 1963 as an early Ziegler-Natta catalyst (but not successful in the long run)[11] Chromocene compounds were first employed in ethylene polymerization in 1972 by Union Carbide[12] and continue to used today in the industrial production of high-density polyethylene.
The organochromium compound (phenylmethoxycarbene)pentacarbonylchromium, Ph(OCH3)C=Cr(CO)5 was the first carbene complex to be crystallographically characterized by Fischer in 1967 (now called a Fischer carbene).[13] The first ever carbyne, this one also containing chromium, made its debut in 1973.[14]
The first example of a proposed metal-metal quintuple bond is found in a compound of the type [CrAr]2, where Ar is a bulky aryl ligand.
Although organochromium chemistry is heavily employed in industrial catalysis, relatively few reagents have been developed for applications in organic synthesis. Two are the Nozaki-Hiyama-Kishi reaction (1977) (transmetallation with organonickel intermediate) and the Takai olefination (1986)(oxidation of Cr(II) to Cr(III) while replacing halogens).
Organochromium compounds can be divided into these broad compound classes:
Chromonium catalysts are important in ethylene polymerization.[16] Two industrial catalysts exist: the Phillips catalyst is deposited chromium(III) oxide on silica with activation by hydrogen. A Union Carbide catalyst is based on silica and chromocene. Exactly how these catalysts work is unclear. One model system describes it as coordination polymerization:
With two THF ligands the catalyst is stable but in dichloromethane one ligand is lost to form a 13 electron chromium intermediate. This enables side-on addition of a ethylene unit and a polymer chain can grow by migratory insertion.
Chromium compounds also catalyse the trimerization of ethylene to produce the monomer 1-hexene.[17]
The heavier group 6 elements molybdenum and tungsten form organometallic compounds similar to those for chromium but also with differences. Whereas Cr(III) aquo alkyl compounds are well studied, the corresponding Mo(III) and W(III) compounds are not. Whereas chromocene is a stable compound, the related molybdenocene and tungstenocene are highly reactive. On the other hand, Mo and W readily form derivatives of the type Cp2MX2, whereas the smaller Cr does not form such clamshell compounds. Homoleptic alkyl and aryl complexes of the type R4M are rare, and hexamethyltungsten has no analogue in Cr chemistry.
Similar are the carbonyls such as molybdenum hexacarbonyl and tungsten hexacarbonyl and the related carbene and carbyne complexes. Compounds of the type [CpM(CO)3]2 are known for all three metals, e.g. Cyclopentadienylmolybdenum tricarbonyl dimer.[18] The chromium compound is however prone to homolysis of the Cr-Cr bond owing to steric crowding.
In the Kauffmann olefination, molybdenum(III) chloride and methyllithium form an organometallic complex capable of carbonyl olefination.
CH | He | ||||||||||||||||
CLi | CBe | CB | CC | CN | CO | CF | Ne | ||||||||||
CNa | CMg | CAl | CSi | CP | CS | CCl | CAr | ||||||||||
CK | CCa | CSc | CTi | CV | CCr | CMn | CFe | CCo | CNi | CCu | CZn | CGa | CGe | CAs | CSe | CBr | CKr |
CRb | CSr | CY | CZr | CNb | CMo | CTc | CRu | CRh | CPd | CAg | CCd | CIn | CSn | CSb | CTe | CI | CXe |
CCs | CBa | CHf | CTa | CW | CRe | COs | CIr | CPt | CAu | CHg | CTl | CPb | CBi | CPo | CAt | Rn | |
Fr | Ra | Rf | Db | Sg | Bh | Hs | Mt | Ds | Rg | Cn | Uut | Uuq | Uup | Uuh | Uus | Uuo | |
↓ | |||||||||||||||||
CLa | CCe | CPr | CNd | CPm | CSm | CEu | CGd | CTb | CDy | CHo | CEr | CTm | CYb | CLu | |||
Ac | Th | Pa | CU | Np | Pu | Am | Cm | Bk | Cf | Es | Fm | Md | No | Lr |
Core organic chemistry | Many uses in chemistry |
Academic research, but no widespread use | Bond unknown / not assessed |