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Carbonyl complexes cobalt-osmium

In the early work on the thermolysis of metal complexes for the synthesis of metal nanoparticles, the precursor carbonyl complex of transition metals, e.g., Co2(CO)8, in organic solvent functions as a metal source of nanoparticles and thermally decomposes in the presence of various polymers to afford polymer-protected metal nanoparticles under relatively mild conditions [1-3]. Particle sizes depend on the kind of polymers, ranging from 5 to >100 nm. The particle size distribution sometimes became wide. Other cobalt, iron [4], nickel [5], rhodium, iridium, rutheniuim, osmium, palladium, and platinum nanoparticles stabilized by polymers have been prepared by similar thermolysis procedures. Besides carbonyl complexes, palladium acetate, palladium acetylacetonate, and platinum acetylac-etonate were also used as a precursor complex in organic solvents like methyl-wo-butylketone [6-9]. These results proposed facile preparative method of metal nanoparticles. However, it may be considered that the size-regulated preparation of metal nanoparticles by thermolysis procedure should be conducted under the limited condition. [Pg.367]

Many carbonyl and carbonyl metallate complexes of the second and third row, in low oxidation states, are basic in nature and, for this reason, adequate intermediates for the formation of metal— metal bonds of a donor-acceptor nature. Furthermore, the structural similarity and isolobal relationship between the proton and group 11 cations has lead to the synthesis of a high number of cluster complexes with silver—metal bonds.1534"1535 Thus, silver(I) binds to ruthenium,15 1556 osmium,1557-1560 rhodium,1561,1562 iron,1563-1572 cobalt,1573 chromium, molybdenum, or tungsten,1574-1576 rhe-nium, niobium or tantalum, or nickel. Some examples are shown in Figure 17. [Pg.988]

Decatrienes, in intramolecular Alder-ene reactions, 10, 578 Dechlorination reactions, via cobalt(III) complexes, 7, 44 Decomposition pathways mixed metal carbonyls, via sonochemistry, 1, 310 in mononuclear ruthenium and osmium alkenyl formations, 6, 405... [Pg.92]

Given the isoelectronic relationship between [CR] and [NO] and the ubiquity of this latter ligand in the coordination chemistry of later transition metals, the scarcity of mononuclear alkylidyne complexes of metals from groups 8-10 is surprising [1-4]. Isolated examples have been reported for iron [5], cobalt [6], ruthenium [4,7], osmium [4,8-9] and iridium [10]. Most of the examples known employ routes with extensive precedent in early transition metal systems, i.e., either electrophilic attack at the p-atom of a hetero carbonyl (CS [5], CTe [4], or C=CH2 [10]) or the Lewis-acid assisted abstraction of an alkoxide group from a carbene precursor [5] (Scheme 1). The one approach which is, too date, peculiar to group 8 metals involves reduction of a divalent dichlorocarbene complex by lithium aryls [4]. The limitation of this procedure to ruthenium and osmium is presumably not a feature of these metals but rather a result of the present lack of synthetic routes to suitable dihalocarbene precursor complexes of earlier metals. [Pg.239]


See other pages where Carbonyl complexes cobalt-osmium is mentioned: [Pg.148]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.121]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.252]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.3960]    [Pg.266]    [Pg.3959]    [Pg.474]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.25 , Pg.195 , Pg.196 ]




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Carbonyl complexes, osmium

Cobalt carbonyl complexes

Cobalt carbonylation

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Osmium complexes

Osmium complexes carbonylation

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