Physics:Radical anion

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Short description: Free radical species
Sodium naphthalene, a salt containing the radical anion of naphthalene as the anion

In organic chemistry, a radical anion is a free radical species[1] that carries a negative charge. Radical anions are encountered in organic chemistry as reduced derivatives of polycyclic aromatic compounds, e.g. sodium naphthenide. An example of a non-carbon radical anion is the superoxide anion, formed by transfer of one electron to an oxygen molecule. Radical anions are typically indicated by [math]\displaystyle{ M^{\bullet -} }[/math].

Polycyclic radical anions

Many aromatic compounds can undergo one-electron reduction by alkali metals. The electron is transferred from the alkali metal ion to an unoccupied antibonding p-p п* orbital of the aromatic molecule. This transfer is usually only energetically favorable if the aprotic solvent efficiently solvates the alkali metal ion. Effective solvents are those that bind to the alkali metal cation: diethyl ether < THF < 1,2-dimethoxyethane < HMPA. In principle any unsaturated molecule can form a radical anion, but the antibonding orbitals are only energetically accessible in more extensive conjugated systems. Ease of formation is in the order benzene < naphthalene < anthracene < pyrene, etc. Salts of the radical anions are often not isolated as solids but used in situ. They are usually deeply colored.

Other examples

Cyclooctatetraene is reduced by elemental potassium to the dianion. The resulting dianion is a 10-pi electron system, which conforms to the Huckel rule for aromaticity. Quinone is reduced to a semiquinone radical anion. Semidiones are derived from the reduction of dicarbonyl compounds.

Reactions

Redox

The pi-radical anions are used as reducing agents in specialized syntheses. Being soluble in at least some solvents, these salts act faster than the alkali metals themselves. The disadvantages are that the polycyclic hydrocarbon must be removed. The reduction potential of alkali metal naphthalene salts is about 3.1 V (vs Fc+/0). The reduction potentials of the larger systems are lower, for example acenaphthalene is 2.45 V.[7] Many radical anions are susceptible to further reduction to dianions.

reduction potentials for various M(18-crown-6)+hydrocarbon[4]
hydrocarbon M+ E1/2 comments
naphthalene Li+ -3.09 V can be reduced to dianion
naphthalene Na+ -3.09 V
biphenyl Li+ -3.18 V
anthracene Na+ -2.53 V
perylene Na+ -2.19 V includes dme solvate

Protonation

Addition of a proton source (even water) to a radical anion results in protonation, i.e. the sequence of reduction followed by protonation is equivalent to hydrogenation. For instance, the anthracene radical anion forms mainly (but not exclusively) 9,10-dihydroanthracene. Radical anions and their protonation are central to the Birch reduction.

Coordination to metal ions

Radical anions of polycyclic aromatic compounds function as ligands in organometallic chemistry.[8]

Radical cations

Cationic radical species are much less common than the anions. Denoted [math]\displaystyle{ M^{+\bullet} }[/math], they appear prominently in mass spectrometry.[9] When a gas-phase molecule is subjected to electron ionization one electron is abstracted by an electron in the electron beam to create a radical cation M+.. This species represents the molecular ion or parent ion. A typical mass spectrum shows multiple signals because the molecular ion fragments into a complex mixture of ions and uncharged radical species. For example, the methanol radical cation fragments into a methenium cation CH3+ and a hydroxyl radical. In naphthalene the unfragmented radical cation is by far the most prominent peak in the mass spectrum. Secondary species are generated from proton gain (M+1) and proton loss (M-1).

Some compounds containing the dioxygenyl cation can be prepared in bulk.[10]

Organic conductors

Radical cations figure prominently in the chemistry and properties of conducting polymers. Such polymers are formed by the oxidation of heterocycles to give radical cations, which condense with the parent heterocycle. For example, polypyrrole is prepared by oxidation of pyrrole using ferric chloride in methanol:

n C4H4NH + 2 FeCl3 → (C4H2NH)n + 2 FeCl2 + 2 HCl

Once formed, these polymers become conductive upon oxidation.[11] Polarons and bipolarons are radical cations encountered in doped conducting polymers.

References

  1. IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version:  (2006–) "radical ion". doi:10.1351/goldbook.R05073
  2. Liu, X.; Ellis, J. E. (2004). "Hexacarbonylvanadate(1−) and Hexacarbonylvanadium(0)". Inorg. Synth. 34: 96–103. doi:10.1002/0471653683.ch3. ISBN 0-471-64750-0. 
  3. Rieke, Reuben D.; Wu, Tse-Chong; Rieke, Loretta I. (1995). "Highly Reactive Calcium for the Preparation of Organocalcium Reagents: 1-Adamantyl Calcium Halides and Their Addition to Ketones: 1-(1-Adamantyl)cyclohexanol". Org. Synth. 72: 147. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.072.0147. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 Castillo, Maximiliano; Metta-Magaña, Alejandro J.; Fortier, Skye (2016). "Isolation of Gravimetrically Quantifiable Alkali Metal Arenides Using 18-Crown-6". New Journal of Chemistry 40 (3): 1923–1926. doi:10.1039/C5NJ02841H. 
  5. Kucera, Benjamin E.; Jilek, Robert E.; Brennessel, William W.; Ellis, John E. (2014). "Bis(pyrene)metal complexes of vanadium, niobium and titanium: Isolable homoleptic pyrene complexes of transition metals". Acta Crystallographica Section C: Structural Chemistry 70 (8): 749–753. doi:10.1107/S2053229614015290. PMID 25093352. 
  6. Näther, Christian; Bock, Hans; Havlas, Zdenek; Hauck, Tim (1998). "Solvent-Shared and Solvent-Separated Ion Multiples of Perylene Radical Anions and Dianions: An Exemplary Case of Alkali Metal Cation Solvation". Organometallics 17 (21): 4707–4715. doi:10.1021/om970610g. 
  7. Connelly, Neil G.; Geiger, William E. (1996). "Chemical Redox Agents for Organometallic Chemistry". Chemical Reviews 96 (2): 877–910. doi:10.1021/cr940053x. PMID 11848774. 
  8. Ellis, John E. (2019). "The Chatt Reaction: Conventional Routes to homoleptic Arenemetalates of d-Block Elements". Dalton Transactions 48 (26): 9538–9563. doi:10.1039/C8DT05029E. PMID 30724934. 
  9. Sparkman, O. David (2000). Mass spectrometry desk reference. Pittsburgh: Global View Pub. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-9660813-2-9. 
  10. Solomon, I. J.; Brabets, R. I.; Uenishi, R. K.; Keith, J. N.; McDonough, J. M. (1964). "New Dioxygenyl Compounds". Inorganic Chemistry 3 (3): 457. doi:10.1021/ic50013a036. 
  11. "Polypyrrole: a conducting polymer; its synthesis, properties and applications" Russ. Chem. Rev. 1997, vol. 66, p.443ff.(http://iopscience.iop.org/0036-021X/66/5/R04)