An investigation of Cu(II) and Ni(II)-catalysed hydrolysis of (di)imines
Journal article, 2010

The reactions of six diimine ligands with Cu(II) and Ni(II) halide salts have been investigated. The diimine ligands were Ph2C=N(CH2)(n)NC=Ph-2 (n = 2 (Bz(2)en, 1a), 3 (Bz(2)pn, 1b), 4 (Bz2bn, 1c)), N, N'-bis-(2-tert-butylthio- 1-ylmethylenebenzene)-2,2'diamino-biphenyl (2), N,N'-bis-(2-chloro-1-ylmethylenebenzene)-1,3diaminobenzene (3) and N,N'-bis-(2-chloro-1-ylmethylenebenzene)-1,2-ethanediamine (4). Reactions of 1a-c, 2-4 with CuCl2 center dot 2H(2)O in dry ethanol at ambient temperature led to complete or partial hydrolysis of the diimine ligands to ultimately form copper diamine complexes. The non-hydrolyzed complexes of 1b and 1c, [Cu(L)Cl-2] (L = 1b, 1c), could be isolated when the reactions were carried out at low temperatures, and the half-hydrolyzed complex [Cu(Bzpn)Cl-2] could also be identified via X-ray crystallography. Similarly, reactions of 1a or 1b with NiCl2 center dot 6H(2)O or [NiBr2(dme)] led to rapid hydrolysis of the imines and Ni complexes containing half-hydrolyzed 1a (Bzen; [trans-[Ni(Bzen)(2)Br-2]) and 1b (Bzpn; [Ni(Bzpn) Br-2] could be isolated and identified via single crystal X-ray analysis. Kinetic studies were made of the hydrolyses of 1a, 1b in THF and 2 in acetone, in the presence of Cu(II), and of 1a in acetonitrile, in the presence of Ni(II). Activation parameters were determined for the latter reaction and for the copper-catalyzed hydrolysis of 2; the relatively large negative activation entropies clearly indicate rate-determining steps of an associative nature.

Hydrolysis

Catalysis

molecular-structure

copper(ii) complexes

Copper

Nickel

ligands

chromophores

Diimine

crystal

Author

M. Czaun

Lund University

University of Southern California

S. M. Nelana

Vaal University of Technology

University of Johannesburg

I. A. Guzei

University of Wisconsin Madison

Catrin Hasselgren

Chalmers, Chemical and Biological Engineering

M. Hakansson

University of Gothenburg

Susan Elisabeth Jagner

Chalmers, Chemical and Biological Engineering

G. Lisensky

Beloit College

J. Darkwa

University of Johannesburg

E. Nordlander

Lund University

Inorganica Chimica Acta

0020-1693 (ISSN)

Vol. 363 12 3102-3112

Subject Categories

Chemical Sciences

DOI

10.1016/j.ica.2010.05.025

More information

Latest update

3/2/2018 9