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Monocyclopentadienyl iron complexes

In retrospect, it is ironic to it that when I met Ernst Schumacher in 1969 (he was then Professor at the University of Bern in Switzerland) we did not talk about the experiments he did at Zurich in the same building where I was at that time. Instead, his interest focussed on our work on borazine transition metal compounds and we discussed in some detail whether it would be possible to incorporate metal atoms like chromium or molybdenum between the layers of hexagonal boron nitride (BN) in a similar way as it can be done with graphite. In the course of these discussions I did not mention that, after I had moved to Zurich, we had begun to investigate the reactivity of nickelocene towards both nucleophilic and electrophilic substrates. The reason was that we were still at the beginning, and while we had been able to prepare a series of monocyclopentadienyl nickel complexes from Ni(C5H5)2 and Lewis bases, our attempts to obtain alkyl- or acyl-substituted nickelocenes by the Friedel-Crafts reaction failed. [Pg.178]

Probably substitution of the cyclopentadienyl ligand on alcoholysis and hydrolysis, and its transfer in reactions of di- and monocyclopentadienyl-titanium derivatives with FeClj or iron(II) acetylacetonate, follows a mechanism common for 77-ligand exchange in other metal 77-complexes (see later). [Pg.388]

Bis(cyclopentadienyl)iron derivatives, ferrocenes, are remarkably stable against heat and air and undergo various kinds of chemical reactions. They are usually prepared by the reaction of FeCh with an alkali metal salt of cyclopentadienyl or cyclopentadiene in the presence of base [51]. Although ferrocene derivatives basically have chemical reactivities similar to those of aromatic compounds, they have found only limited applications to organic synthesis so far. However, because chiral ferrocenylphosphines are capable of having both planar chirality and an asymmetry in the side chain in their rigid framework, they have been used recently in a number of asymmetric reactions. In this section, synthesis and developments of monocyclopentadienyl complexes and ferrocenylphosphines are described. The general chemistry of ferrocenes and half metallocene complexes is reviewed elsewhere [52-53]. [Pg.170]


See other pages where Monocyclopentadienyl iron complexes is mentioned: [Pg.84]    [Pg.84]    [Pg.325]    [Pg.169]    [Pg.170]    [Pg.170]    [Pg.522]    [Pg.546]   


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Monocyclopentadienyl complexes

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