Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Metal thermodynamic hydricity

DuBois et al. carried out extensive studies on the thermodynamic hydricity of a series of metal hydrides [13, 15-19]. The determination of thermodynamic hydricity generally requires several measurements (coupled with known thermochemical data) to constitute a complete thermochemical cycle. As with other thermodynamic cycles, obtaining reliable values in an appropriate solvent can be a difficult challenge, and this is sometimes coupled with problems in obtaining reversible electrochemical data. Scheme 7.2 illustrates an example in which the hydricity of cationic monohydrides have been determined. [Pg.161]

Eq. (8) requires determination of the two-electron oxidation potential of L M by electrochemical methods. When combined with the two-electron reduction of protons in Eq. (9), the sum provides Eq. (10), the AGh- values of which can be compared for a series of metal hydrides. Another way to determine the AGh-entails the thermochemical cycle is shown in Scheme 7.3. This method requires measurement of the K of Eq. (11) for a metal complex capable of heterolytic cleavage of H2, using a base (B), where the pK., of BH+ must be known in the solvent in which the other measurements are conducted. In several cases, Du-Bois et al. were able to demonstrate that the two methods gave the same results. The thermodynamic hydricity data (AGh- in CH3CN) for a series of metal hydrides are listed in Table 7.4. Transition metal hydrides exhibit a remarkably large range of thermodynamic hydricity, spanning some 30 kcal mol-1. [Pg.162]

M—H bond dissociation energies, 1, 287 photochemistry, 1, 251 single crystal neutron diffraction, 1, 578 stability toward disproportionation, 1, 301 Metal—hydrogen bonds bond dissociation energy in 1,2-dichloroethane, 1, 289 stable metal hydrides in acetonitrile, 1, 287 thermochemical cycle, 1, 286 in THF and dichloromethane, 1, 289 olefin insertion thermodynamics, 1, 629 in Zr(IV) bis-Cp complexes, 4, 878 Metal—hydrogen hydricity data, 1, 292... [Pg.141]

DuBois and coworkers carried out extensive studies of the thermodynamic hydric-ity of metal hydrides (3.2) in many cases the metal product resulting following hydride transfer will bind a CH3CN ligand (not shown in 3.2), so comparisons of hydricity wiU be solvent-dependent. [Pg.54]


See other pages where Metal thermodynamic hydricity is mentioned: [Pg.160]    [Pg.162]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.195]    [Pg.300]    [Pg.279]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.160 ]




SEARCH



Hydric

Hydricities

Hydricity

Metal hydricity

Metals thermodynamics

Thermodynamic metalations

© 2024 chempedia.info