Chemical properties of 3a,6a-diaza-1,4-diphosphapentalene. Addition of polyhalohydrocarbons

2016 
3a,6a-Diaza-1,4-diphosphapentalene (DDP, 1), in contrast to common azaphospholes, readily reacts with polyhalohydrocarbons with the formation of 1,1- or 1,4-addition products at the phosphorus atoms. Dibromomethane gives the substitution product of two bromine atoms [CH2(DDP)2]Br2 (2) and diphosphine (DDP-DDP)Br2 (3) containing a bridging bromine atom. In the course of the reaction of DDP with CF2Br2, two products of sequential substitution of the bromine atoms were isolated, which are 1,4-Br2(DDP) (6) and [CF2(DDP)2]Br2 (7). Tris(pentafluorophenyl)phosphine reacts with DDP at the C—F bond with the formation of 1,1-addition product 8. Compounds 2, 3, 7, and 8 contain hypervalent (tervalent 4-coordinated) phosphorus atoms. X-ray diffraction data indicate that the mutual arrangement of the DDP fragments in compounds 2, 3, and 7 is determined by the non-covalent interaction of one of the bromine atoms simultaneously with two phosphorus atoms of different DDP fragments in such a way that the lines of the N—P bonds converge at this bromine atom.
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