- Silylene
is "silicene."
Silylenes have been proposed as
reactive intermediate s and are so unstable that they usually cannot be isolated. Silylenes typically have a singletground state , though incarbene s thetriplet state is generally more stable than the singlet state, because the energy gap between the 3s and 3p orbitals of thesilicon atom is very large and so the singlet-triplet gaps are enormous.History
The first experimental chemical observation of silylene as an intermediate was demonstrated by P. S. Skell and E. J. Goldstein in
1964 .The first stable silylene was synthesized and isolated as a diamino silylene, "N,N’"-di-"tert"-butyl-1,3-diaza-2-silacyclopent-4-en-2-ylidene, in
1994 by Denk et al.ynthesis & properties
Silylenes are generally synthesized by
thermolysis orphotolysis of polysilanes, bysilicon atom reactions (insertion , addition or abstraction), bypyrolysis ofsilane s, or by reduction of 1,1-dihalosilane.Simple silylenes are very reactive species and easily dimerize to give
disilene s, so their lifetime is very short. Bulkysubstituent s are used to prevent this dimerization and stabilize silylenes effectively for long-term survival in dilute solution and even in crystals.The reactivities of silylenes are similar to those of
carbene s, andinsertion to polar bonds, addition to multiple bonds, and dimerization occur. But, in contrast tocarbene s,insertion to C-H bonds and C-C bonds generally does not happen and complexation toLewis base takes place.In one study diphenylsilylene is generated by
flash photolysis of a trisilane ["Diphenylsilylene" Andrey G. Moiseev and William J. LeighJ. Am. Chem. Soc. ; 2006; 128(45) pp 14442 - 14443; (Communication) DOI|10.1021/ja0653223] ::
In this reaction diphenylsilylene is simply extruded with formation of the disilane. The silylene can be observed with
UV spectroscopy at 520 nm and is shortlived with achemical half-life of 2microsecond s. Addedmethanol acts as achemical trap with asecond order rate constant of 13x109 mol-1s-1 which is close to diffusion control.Persistent silylenes
Just as with
persistent carbene s, silylenes can be stabilized. The first stable silylenes were discovered byRobert West at theUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison . In one study ["A New Type of N-Heterocyclic Silylene with Ambivalent Reactivity" Matthias Driess, Shenglai Yao, Markus Brym, Christoph van Wüllen, and Dieter LentzJ. Am. Chem. Soc. ; 2006; 128(30) pp 9628 - 9629; (Communication) DOI|10.1021/ja062928i] a stable silylene is synthesized by debromination the dibromosilyl compound 1 bypotassium graphite :: The α-nitrogen atoms in 2 stabilize the electrophilic silicon atom by п-donation. In one contributing resonance structure 2b a negative charge is centered in an
exocyclic methylene group and a positive charge delocalized over the silicon ring system.X-ray diffraction of the compound shows equal N-Si bonds (173 pm) and an unusually short exocylic bond withbond length of 143.6 pm. The compound reacts withtrimethylsilyltriflate to the 1,4-adduct 3 (kinetic product) which slowly isomerizes to the 1,1-adduct 4 as the thermodynamically controlled product.External links
* [http://www.chem.wisc.edu/~osirc/ The Organosilicon Research Center at the UW-Madison]
References
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