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Acetylacetone is an organic compound with molecular formula C5H8O2. This diketone is formally named 2,4-pentanedione. It is a precursor to acetylacetonate (acac), a common bidentate ligand. It is also a building block for the synthesis of heterocyclic compounds.
[edit] PropertiesThe keto and enol forms of acetylacetone coexist in solution; these forms are tautomers. The C2v symmetry for the enol form displayed on the left in scheme 1 has been verified by many methods including microwave spectroscopy.[1] Hydrogen bonding in the enol reduces the steric repulsion between the carbonyl groups. In the gas phase K is 11.7. The equilibrium constant tends to be high in nonpolar solvents: cyclohexane is 42, toluene is 10, THF 7.2, dimethyl sulfoxide (K=2), and water (K=0.23).[2] The enol form is a vinylogous analogue of a carboxylic acid. [edit] PreparationAcetylacetone is prepared industrially by the thermal rearrangement of isopropenylacetate.[3]
Laboratory routes to acetylacetone begin also with acetone. Acetone and acetic anhydride upon the addition of BF3 catalyst:[4]
A second synthesis involves the base-catalyzed condensation of acetone and ethyl acetate, followed by acidification:[4]
Because of the ease of these syntheses, many analogues of acetylacetonates are known. Some examples include C6H5C(O)CH2C(O)C6H5 (dbaH) and (CH3)3CC(O)CH2C(O)CC(CH3)3. Hexafluoroacetylacetonate is also widely used to generate volatile metal complexes. [edit] Acetylacetonate anionThe acetylacetonate anion, C5H7O2−, is the conjugate base of 2,4-pentanedione. It does not exist as a free ion in solution, but is bound to the corresponding cation, such as Na+. In practice, the existence of the free anion, commonly abbreviated acac−, is a useful model. Sodium acetylacetonate may be prepared by deprotonating acetylacetone with sodium hydroxide in a mixture of water-methanol.[5] [edit] Coordination chemistryThe acetylacetonate anion forms complexes with many transition metal ions wherein both oxygen atoms bind to the metal to form a six-membered chelate ring. Some examples include: Mn(acac)3,[6] VO(acac)2, Fe(acac)3, and Co(acac)3. Any complex of the form M(acac)3 is chiral (has a non-superimposable mirror image). Additionally, M(acac)3 complexes can be reduced electrochemically, with the reduction rate being dependent on the solvent and the metal center.[7] Bis and tris complexes of the type M(acac)2 and M(acac)3 are typically soluble in organic solvents, in contrast to the related metal halides. Because of these properties, these complexes are widely used as catalyst precursors and reagents. Important applications include their use as NMR "shift reagents" and as catalysts for organic synthesis, and precursors to industrial hydroformylation catalysts. C5H7O2− in some cases also binds to metals through the central carbon atom; this bonding mode is more common for the third-row transition metals such as platinum(II) and iridium(III). [edit] Metal acetylacetonates[edit] Chromium(III) acetylacetonateCr(acac)3 is used as a spin relaxation agent to improve the sensitivity in quantitative Carbon-13 NMR spectroscopy.[8] [edit] Copper(II) acetylacetonateCu(acac)2, prepared by treating acetylacetone with aqueous Cu(NH3)42+ and is available commercially, catalyzes coupling and carbene transfer reactions. [edit] Copper(I) acetylacetonateUnlike the copper(II) derivative, copper(I) acetylacetonate is an air sensitive oligomeric species. It is employed to catalyze Michael additions.[9] [edit] Manganese(III) acetylacetonate Ball-and-stick model of ∆-Mn(acac)3, with Jahn-Teller tetragonal elongation Mn(acac)3, a one-electron oxidant, is used for coupling phenols.[6] It is prepared by the direct reaction of acetylacetone and potassium permanganate. In terms of electronic structure, Mn(acac)3 is high spin. Its distorted octahedral structure reflects geometric distortions due to the Jahn-Teller effect. The two most common structures for this complex include one with tetrahedral elongation and one with tetragonal compression. For the elongation, two Mn-O bonds are 2.12 Å while the other four are 1.93 Å. For the compression, two Mn-O bonds are 1.95 and the other four are 2.00 Å. The effects of the tetrahedral elongation are noticeably more significant than the effects of the tetragonal compression.[10] [edit] Nickel(II) acetylacetonate"Nickel acac" is not Ni(acac)2 but the trimer [Ni(acac)2]3. This emerald green solid, which is benzene soluble, is widely employed in the preparation of Ni(O) complexes. Upon exposure to the atmosphere, [Ni(acac)2]3 converts to the chalky green monomeric hydrate. [edit] Vanadyl acetylacetonate A ball-and-stick model of VO(acac)2 Vanadyl acetylacetonate is a blue complex with the formula V(O)(acac)2. It is useful in epoxidation of allylic alcohols. [edit] Zinc acetylacetonateThe monoaquo complex Zn(acac)2H2O (m.p. 138-140 °C) is pentacoordinate, adopting a square pyramidal structure.[11] Dehydration of this species gives the hygroscopic anhydrous derivative (m.p. 127 °C). [12] This more volatile derivative has been used as a precursor to films of ZnO. [edit] Iridium acetylacetonatesBoth iridium(I) and Ir(III) form stable acetylacetonato complexes. The Ir(III) derivatives include trans-Ir(acac)2(CH(COMe)2)(H2O) and the more conventional D3-symmetric Ir(acac)3. The C-bonded derivative is a precursor to homogeneous catalysts for C-H activation and related chemistries.[13][14] Iridium(I) derivatives include square-planar Ir(acac)(CO)2 (C2v-symmetry). [edit] Aluminium(III) acetylacetonateAl(C5H7O2)n, or shortened to Al(acac)3 [edit] C-bonded acetylacetonatesC5H7O2− in some cases also binds to metals through the central carbon atom (C3); this bonding mode is more common for the third-row transition metals such as platinum(II) and iridium(III). The complexes Ir(acac)3 and corresponding Lewis-base adducts Ir(acac)3L (L = an amine) contain one carbon-bonded acac ligand. The IR spectra of O-bonded acetylacetonates are characterized by relatively low-energy νCO bands of 1535 cm−1, whereas in carbon-bonded acetylacetonates, the carbonyl vibration occurs closer to the normal range for ketonic C=O, i.e. 1655 cm−1. [edit] Other reactions of acetylacetone
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