Magnesium anthracene is an organomagnesium compound that is almost invariably isolated as its adduct with three tetrahydrofuran (thf) ligands. With the formula Mg(C14H10)(thf)3, this air- and water-sensitive orange solid is obtained by heating a suspension of magnesium in a thf solution of anthracene.[1]
Structure and reactivity
According to X-ray crystallography, the Mg center is 5-coordinate, occupying a C2O3 ligand sphere. The fold angle between the two benzo groups is 72.6°.[2]
The compound behaves as a source of the carbanion [C14H10]2- as well as a source of highly reactive Mg. With electrophiles, the compound reacts to give dihydroanthracene derivatives C14H10E2. Electrophiles include ketones, CO2, organotin chlorides, and organoaluminium chlorides. Ethylene inserts into one Mg-C bond. Hydrogen induces release of anthracene, yielding magnesium hydride (MgH2).[1]
References
^ abBorislav Bogdanovic (1988). "Magnesium Anthracene Systems and Their Application in Synthesis and Catalysis". Accounts of Chemical Research. 21 (7): 261–267. doi:10.1021/ar00151a002.
^L. M. Engelhardt; S. Harvey; C. L. Raston; A. H. White (1988). "Organomagnesium Reagents: The Crystal Structures of [Mg(anthracene)(THF)3] and [Mg(triphenylmethyl)Br(OEt2)2]". Journal of Organometallic Chemistry. 341 (1–3): 39. doi:10.1016/0022-328X(88)89061-2.