- Tetrahedrane
Tetrahedrane is a
platonic hydrocarbon withchemical formula carbon4hydrogen4 and a tetrahedral structure. Extremeangle strain (carbon bond angles deviate considerably from the tetrahedral bond angle of 109.5°) prevents this molecule from forming outside of man-made production.In 1978, Günther Maier prepared a stable tetrahedrane with four
tert-butyl substituent s. [cite journal | author = G. Maier, S. Pfriem, U. Schäfer and R. Matusch | title = Tetra-"tert"-butyltetrahedrane | year = 1978 | journal =Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English | volume = 17 | issue = 7 | pages = 520–521 | doi = 10.1002/anie.197805201] These substituents are very bulky, and completely envelop the tetrahedrane core. Bonds in the core are prevented from breaking because this would force the substituents closer together (corset effect) resulting inVan der Waals strain . Tetrahedrane is one of the possibleplatonic hydrocarbons and has theIUPAC name tricyclo [1.1.0.02,4] butane.Tetra(trimethylsilyl)tetrahedrane
In Tetra(trimethylsilyl)tetrahedrane (I) the
tert-butyl groups have been replaced bytrimethylsilyl groups. [cite journal | author = M. Tanaka and A. Sekiguchi | title = Hexakis(trimethylsilyl)tetrahedranyltetrahedrane | year = 2005 | journal =Angewandte Chemie International Edition | volume = 44 | issue = 36 | pages = 5821–5823 | doi = 10.1002/anie.200501605] Remarkably, this compound is far more stable than the tert-butyl analogue. The silicon-carbon bond is longer than a carbon-carbon bond, and therefore the corset effect is reduced. On the other hand, the trimethylsilyl group is a sigma donor which explains the increased stabilization of the tetrahedrane. Whereas the tert-butyl tetrahedrane melts at 135°C , at which temperature decomposition to the cyclobutadiene starts, the trimethyl silyl tetrahedrane melts at a much higher temperature of 202 °C, and is stable up to 300 °C, at which point it reverts to theacetylene starting material.The tetrahedrane skeleton is made up of
banana bond s, and hence the carbon atoms are high ins-orbital character. From NMR, "sp" hybridization can be deduced, normally reserved fortriple bond s. As a consequence thebond length s are unusually short with 1.52angstrom s (152picometer s). The latest development is theorganic synthesis and characterization of the tetrahedrane dimer (II). The connecting bond is even shorter with 1.436 Å (143.6 pm). An ordinary carbon carbon bond has a length of 1.54 Å (154 pm).:
Tetrasilatetrahedrane
In tetrasilatetrahedrane the carbon atoms in the tetrahedrane cage are replaced by
silicon . The standard silicon silicon bond is much longer (235 pm) and the cage is again enveloped by a total of 16trimethylsilyl groups. This makes the compound thermally stable. The silatetrahedrane can be reduced withpotassium graphite to the tetrasilatetrahedranide potassium salt. In this compound one of the silicon atoms of the cage has lost a silyl substituent and carries a negative charge. The potassium cation can be captured by acrown ether and in the resulting complex potassium and the silyl anion are separated by a distance of 885 picometer. One of the Si- - Si bonds is now 272 picometer and its silicon atom has aninverted tetrahedral geometry . Furthermore the four cage silicon atoms are equivalent on theNMR timescale due to migrations of the silyl substituents over the cage. [cite journal | title = Tetrasilatetrahedranide: A Silicon Cage Anion | author = Masaaki Ichinohe, Masafumi Toyoshima, Rei Kinjo, and Akira Sekiguchi | journal =J. Am. Chem. Soc. | year = 2003 | volume = 125 | issue = 44 | pages = 13328–13329 | format = communication | doi = 10.1021/ja0305050]:
The dimerization reaction observed for the carbon tetrahedrane compound is also attempted for a tetrasilatetrahedrane. [cite journal | author = G. Fischer, V. Huch, P. Mayer, S. K. Vasisht, M. Veith and N. Wiberg | title = Si8(Si"t"Bu3)6: A Hitherto Unknown Cluster Structure in Silicon Chemistry | year = 2005 | journal =
Angewandte Chemie International Edition | volume = 44 | issue = 48 | pages = 7884–7887 | doi = 10.1002/anie.200501289] In this tetrahedrane the cage is protected by 4 so-calledsuper silyl group s in which a silicon atom has 3tert-butyl substituents. The dimer does not materialize but a reaction withiodine in benzene followed by reaction with the tri-tert-butyl sila anion results in the formation of an eight membered siliconcluster compound which can be described as a Si2 dumbbell (length 229 picometer and with inversion of tetrahedral geometry) sandwiched between two almost parallel Si3 rings.:
In known eight-membered clusters of in the same
carbon group ,tin Sn8R6 andgermanium Ge8R6 the cluster atoms are located on the corners of a cube.References
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