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Sodium cyclopentadienide
Sodium cyclopentadienide is an organosodium compound with the formula C5H5Na. The compound is often abbreviated as NaCp, where Cp− is the cyclopentadienide anion. Sodium cyclopentadienide is a colorless solid, although samples often are pink owing to traces of oxidized impurities.
Preparation
The first salt of cyclopentadienide to be reported was potassium cyclopentadienide, prepared by Johannes Thiele. In 1901 there was not much interest in the topic.
Sodium cyclopentadienyl is prepared from cyclopentadiene and molten sodium metal: Sodium can also be provided as "sodium wire" or "sodium sand", the fine suspension produced when molten sodium is mixed with refluxing xylene, then cooled. The highly exothermic metallation can undergo catastrophic thermal runaway without proper cooling, as occurred in the T2 Laboratories explosion and fire.
Alternatively, many reagents deprotonate cyclopentadiene; it has pKa 15. Early work used Grignard reagents as bases, but sodium hydride is more convenient nowadays: :
Sodium cyclopentadienide is commercially available as a solution in THF.
Applications
Sodium cyclopentadienide is a common reagent for the preparation of metallocenes. For example, the preparation of ferrocene
: :
Sodium cyclopentadienide is also used for the preparation of substituted cyclopentadienyl derivatives such as the ester and formyl derivatives: : These compounds are used to prepare substituted metallocenes such as 1,1'-ferrocenedicarboxylic acid.
Structure
The nature of NaCp depends strongly on its medium and for the purposes of planning syntheses; the reagent is often represented as a salt . Crystalline solvent-free NaCp, which is rarely encountered, is a "polydecker" sandwich complex, consisting of an infinite chain of alternating Na+ centers sandwiched between μ-η5:η5-C5H5 ligands. As a solution in donor solvents, NaCp is highly solvated, especially at the alkali metal as suggested by the isolability of the adduct Na(tmeda)Cp.
In contrast to alkali metal cyclopentadienides, tetrabutylammonium cyclopentadienide () was found to be supported entirely by ionic bonding and its structure is representative of the structure of the cyclopentadienide anion (, Cp−) in the solid state. However, the anion deviates somewhat from a planar, regular pentagon, with C–C bond lengths ranging from 138.0 -140.1 pm and C–C–C bond angles ranging from 107.5–108.8°.
References
References
- {{RedBookRef2005
- {{Cite Q. Q126217369
- {{Cotton&Wilkinson5th
- Tarun K. Panda, Michael T. Gamer, Peter W. Roesky "An Improved Synthesis of Sodium and Potassium Cyclopentadienide" Organometallics, 2003, 22, 877–878.{{doi. 10.1021/om0207865
- [[Geoffrey Wilkinson. (1963). "Ferrocene".
- Partridge, John J.; Chadha, Naresh K.; Uskokovic, Milan R.. (1990). "An asymmetric hydroboration of 5-substituted cyclopentadienes: synthesis of methyl (1''R'',5''R'')-5-hydroxy-2-cyclopentene-1-acetate".
- "T2 Laboratories Inc. Reactive Chemical Explosion". USCSB.
- (1999). "Synthesis and Technique in Inorganic Chemistry". University Science Books: Mill Valley.
- (1954). "Bis-cyclopentadienyl Compounds of Ti, Zr, V, Nb and Ta". [[J. Am. Chem. Soc.]].
- (1982). "Functionally Substituted Cyclopentadienyl Metal Compounds". Adv. Organomet. Chem..
- (2013). "Large-Scale Preparation of 1,1′-Ferrocenedicarboxylic Acid, a Key Compound for the Synthesis of 1,1′-Disubstituted Ferrocene Derivatives". Organometallics.
- (1997). "Solid State Structures of Cyclopentadienyllithium, -sodium, and -potassium. Determination by High-Resolution Powder Diffraction". [[Organometallics]].
- Elschenbroich, C.. (2006). "Organometallics". Wiley-VCH: Weinheim.
- (1995-03-01). "Tetrabutylammonium Salts of 2-Nitropropane, Cyclopentadiene and 9-Ethylfluorene: Crystal Structures and Use in Anionic Polymerization". Zeitschrift für Naturforschung B.
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