Back to Search Start Over

Hiding and Recovering Electrons in a Dimetallic Endohedral Fullerene: Air-Stable Products from Radical Additions

Authors :
Xing Lu
Masayoshi Saito
Filip Uhlík
Toshihiro Aizawa
Takeshi Akasaka
Yutaka Maeda
Marilyn M. Olmstead
Michio Yamada
Tatsuhisa Kato
Shigeru Nagase
Mitsuaki Suzuki
Zdenek Slanina
Alan L. Balch
Hiroki Kurihara
Source :
Journal of the American Chemical Society. 137:232-238
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2014.

Abstract

Fullerenyl radicals can be generated by addition of a free radical to a fullerene surface, by nucleophilic addition followed by one-electron oxidation, or by thermal dissociation of singly bonded fullerene dimers. However, fullerenyl radicals are usually very reactive and generally cannot be isolated. On the contrary, we have found that the reactions of the dimetallic endofullerenes, La2@Ih-C80 and La2@D5h-C80, with 3-chloro-5,6-diphenyltriazine resulted in mono-addition of the triazinyl radical to the fullerene cages to yield isolable fullerenyl radicals. The unusual stability of these fullerenyl radicals arises from the confinement of the unpaired electron to an internal, metal-metal bonding orbital. Accordingly, the fullerene cage protects the radical center from other reactive species. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the fullerenyl radical adduct of La2@Ih-C80 reacts with toluene to afford additional benzylation. Interestingly, the benzylated derivative is diamagnetic in solution, while it forms a paramagnetic dimer when crystallized.

Details

ISSN :
15205126 and 00027863
Volume :
137
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f6bcd439e380692a73984776f62aea04
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/ja509956y