The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

A Rare Thermochromic Zwitterionic Nickel (II) Complex of the Bulky Alpha Ligand 1,2-Bis-(di-tbutylphosphinomethyl)Benzene

A Rare Thermochromic Zwitterionic Nickel (II) Complex of the Bulky Alpha Ligand 1,2-Bis-(di-tbutylphosphinomethyl)Benzene
A Rare Thermochromic Zwitterionic Nickel (II) Complex of the Bulky Alpha Ligand 1,2-Bis-(di-tbutylphosphinomethyl)Benzene

The reaction of the bulky ligand 1,2-bis-(di-tert-butylphosphinomethyl)benzene, 1 with [Ni(DME)Cl2], 3, DME = 1,2-dimethoxyethane, at room temperature over extended periods, affords the new blue Zwitterionic complex [2-(C6H4-CH2P(H)tBu2-1-(CH2PtBu2NiCl3)], 4, which contains a phosphonium group and an anionic nickel trichloride. This complex decomposes in alcohols such as methanol and the solution turns yellow. A discussion of the possible mechanism leading to the observed product is presented. Key to this is identification of the source of the phosphonium proton, which we speculated to arise from trace water in the initial nickel complex. To prove that trace water was present in [Ni(DME)Cl2], a sample of this precursor was reacted under similar condition with anhydrous DMF alone. In addition to the known complex [Ni(DMF)6)]2+[NiCl4]2−, 5, we identified the trans-diaqua complex [Ni(Cl)2(H2O)2(DMF)2], 6, which proved the presence of trace water. Interestingly in dimethylformamide, [2-(C6H4-CH2P(H)tBu2-1-(CH2PtBu2NiCl3)] exhibits thermochromic properties: an solution that is pale blue at ambient temperature reversibly changes colour to yellow upon cooling. This behaviour is specific to DMF and is related to the solvato-chromic behaviour exhibited by related DMF–nickel complexes. A discussion of the NMR spectra of compound 4 in a range of solvents is presented. The structures of the previously prepared molybdenum complex, [1,2-(C6H4-CH2PtBu2)2Mo(CO)4] and the bis-(phosphine sulphide) of the ligand, [1,2-(C6H4-H2P(S)tBu2)2], 5, are described for structural comparative purposes.

alpha, complexation, crystal, DMF, metal complex, nickel, phosphine, self-assembly, structure, synthesis, thermochromic, Zwitterion
2304-6740
1 - 13
Butler, Ian R.
a3e83fb2-442a-47c7-95c8-756a9a5e9f79
Horton, Peter N.
154c8930-bfc3-495b-ad4a-8a278d5da3a5
Coles, Simon J.
3116f58b-c30c-48cf-bdd5-397d1c1fecf8
Clegg, William
5b1994af-8799-4402-9c01-8479959de00b
Fortune, Kevin M.
67a13a74-0bd3-4857-af05-1287465d05e7
Drew, Michael G.B.
eea6c3a9-775f-48cd-910e-ea4f8e0ccde5
Suwada, Kamil
73088cb0-ca97-49f0-90ab-2de33626a1b4
Butler, Ian R.
a3e83fb2-442a-47c7-95c8-756a9a5e9f79
Horton, Peter N.
154c8930-bfc3-495b-ad4a-8a278d5da3a5
Coles, Simon J.
3116f58b-c30c-48cf-bdd5-397d1c1fecf8
Clegg, William
5b1994af-8799-4402-9c01-8479959de00b
Fortune, Kevin M.
67a13a74-0bd3-4857-af05-1287465d05e7
Drew, Michael G.B.
eea6c3a9-775f-48cd-910e-ea4f8e0ccde5
Suwada, Kamil
73088cb0-ca97-49f0-90ab-2de33626a1b4

Butler, Ian R., Horton, Peter N., Coles, Simon J., Clegg, William, Fortune, Kevin M., Drew, Michael G.B. and Suwada, Kamil (2025) A Rare Thermochromic Zwitterionic Nickel (II) Complex of the Bulky Alpha Ligand 1,2-Bis-(di-tbutylphosphinomethyl)Benzene. Inorganics, 13 (9), 1 - 13, [291]. (doi:10.3390/inorganics13090291).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The reaction of the bulky ligand 1,2-bis-(di-tert-butylphosphinomethyl)benzene, 1 with [Ni(DME)Cl2], 3, DME = 1,2-dimethoxyethane, at room temperature over extended periods, affords the new blue Zwitterionic complex [2-(C6H4-CH2P(H)tBu2-1-(CH2PtBu2NiCl3)], 4, which contains a phosphonium group and an anionic nickel trichloride. This complex decomposes in alcohols such as methanol and the solution turns yellow. A discussion of the possible mechanism leading to the observed product is presented. Key to this is identification of the source of the phosphonium proton, which we speculated to arise from trace water in the initial nickel complex. To prove that trace water was present in [Ni(DME)Cl2], a sample of this precursor was reacted under similar condition with anhydrous DMF alone. In addition to the known complex [Ni(DMF)6)]2+[NiCl4]2−, 5, we identified the trans-diaqua complex [Ni(Cl)2(H2O)2(DMF)2], 6, which proved the presence of trace water. Interestingly in dimethylformamide, [2-(C6H4-CH2P(H)tBu2-1-(CH2PtBu2NiCl3)] exhibits thermochromic properties: an solution that is pale blue at ambient temperature reversibly changes colour to yellow upon cooling. This behaviour is specific to DMF and is related to the solvato-chromic behaviour exhibited by related DMF–nickel complexes. A discussion of the NMR spectra of compound 4 in a range of solvents is presented. The structures of the previously prepared molybdenum complex, [1,2-(C6H4-CH2PtBu2)2Mo(CO)4] and the bis-(phosphine sulphide) of the ligand, [1,2-(C6H4-H2P(S)tBu2)2], 5, are described for structural comparative purposes.

Text
inorganics-13-00291-v2 - Version of Record
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (4MB)

More information

Accepted/In Press date: 26 August 2025
Published date: 30 August 2025
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2025 by the authors.
Keywords: alpha, complexation, crystal, DMF, metal complex, nickel, phosphine, self-assembly, structure, synthesis, thermochromic, Zwitterion

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505918
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505918
ISSN: 2304-6740
PURE UUID: e301b10c-35a9-423f-b096-3f7e7bc49620
ORCID for Peter N. Horton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8886-2016
ORCID for Simon J. Coles: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8414-9272

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 23 Oct 2025 16:46
Last modified: 24 Oct 2025 01:37

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Ian R. Butler
Author: Peter N. Horton ORCID iD
Author: Simon J. Coles ORCID iD
Author: William Clegg
Author: Kevin M. Fortune
Author: Michael G.B. Drew
Author: Kamil Suwada

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×