- Terpyridine
. Its molecular formula is C15H11N3.
Terpyridine was first synthesized by G. Morgan and F. H. Burstall in 1932. It was called tripyridyl at that time.
ynthesis
Terpyridine was initially synthesized from the
oxidative coupling of pyridines. This method, however, has low-yield reactions and otheroligomer s andisomer s are created, so it was necessary to separate the mixtures. In 1991, L. E. Guise et al. reported the more efficient synthesis of terpyridine from thecondensation of 2-acetylpyridine and enaminone, which is prepared by the reaction of 2-acetylpyridine withN,N-dimethylformamide dimethylacetal .An alternative is to react 2-acetylpyridine with a base,carbon disulfide andmethyl iodide to form PyCOCH=C(SMe)2, this is then reacted with 2-acetylpyridine and a base to form a 1,5-diketone, this diketone is then reacted withammonium acetate to form a terpyridine which is then treated withRaney nickel to remove thethioether group. [Potts, K. T.; Ralli, P.; Theodoridis, G.; Winslow, P. “2,2' : 6',2' -Terpyridine” Organic Syntheses, Collected Volume 7, p.476 (1990).]Another alternative is to form a BTP and then to react this with
norbornadiene to convert thetriazine rings to pyridine rings.Substituted terpyridines are also synthesized from
palladium -catalyzed cross-coupling reactions.Properties
Terpyridine is a tridentate
ligand and forms a complex with atransition metal ion in the same way as other polypyridine compounds, such as2,2'-bipyridine and 1,10-phenanthroline. In particular, to six-coordinated metal ions, such ascobalt oriron , two terpyridines can be coordinated. These kinds of complexes, called bisterpyridine complexes, do not have any enantiomers, so they differ from bipyridine complexes. The steric structures of bisterpyridine complexes are therefore easy to control.The terpyridine complexes, like other polypyridine complexes, exhibit characteristic optical and electrochemical properties: metal-to-ligand
charge transfer (MLCT) in the visible light region, reversible reduction andoxidation , and fairly intenseluminescence . In these properties, however, slight differences exist between terpyridine complexes and bipyridine complexes.The fact that terpy can act as a
pi-acceptor enables terpy andbipyridine to stabilise 'abnormal' oxidation states. For instance with two terpy ligands it is possible to form inacetonitrile cobalt(III) andcobalt (I) complexes which are stable on the time scale of seconds. Also it is possible to formnickel (I) and nickel(III) complexes.In addition to the
metal atoms in these complexes undergoing redox reactions, theligands can accept an electron in oneelectron reductions.Related compounds
The 2,6-bis-(1,2,4-triazinyl) pyridines are able to bind to metals in a similar way to 2,2';6',2"-terpyridine. These 2,6-bis-(1,2,4-triazinyl) pyridines ("BTPs") contain both
pyridine andtriazine rings. They are made by the reactions ofhydrazine and a 1,2-diketone with pyridine-2,6-dicarbonitrile. These compounds were first made by F.H. Case, but in recent years they have been of interest as possible extraction agents for the trivalentminor actinides in aSANEX process. For more details of the SANEX process please seenuclear reprocessing .References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.