4.7 Article

Copper Corroles Are Inherently Saddled

Journal

INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 48, Issue 16, Pages 7794-7799

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ic900744v

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Funding

  1. Research Council of Norway

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X-ray crystallographic analyses of two sterically unhindered copper meso-triarylcorroles, Cu[5,15-P-2-10-(4-MeOP)C] and Cu[5,15-(4-CF3P)(2)-10-(4-MeOP)C] (P = phenyl and C = corrole), revealed substantially saddled corrole rings. These results are in marked contrast to those on highly sterically hindered cobalt(III) and iridium(III) corroles, which exhibit planar corrole macrocycles. The solution to this conundrum is that copper corroles are inherently saddled, as a result of a specific copper(d)-corrole(pi) orbital interaction. This orbital interaction results in a noninnocent corrole ligand, and the overall electronic structure may thus be described as Cu-II-corrole(center dot 2-). While many specific metal(d)-macrocycle(pi) orbital interactions are known for nonplanar metalloporphyrins, this work provides a rare example of such an orbital interaction providing the actual driving force for a significant nonplanar distortion. Our findings on copper corroles, along with those of others on cobalt and iridium corroles, thus constitute an intriguing and somewhat counterintuitive chapter in the structural chemistry of metallocorroles.

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