From Diaminosilylenes to Silapyramidanes: Making Sense of the Stability of Divalent Silicon Compounds

19 May 2023, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Since the discovery of decamethylsilicocene over three decades ago, chemists have successfully isolated a variety of divalent silicon compounds by orchestrating steric and electronic effects to their advantage. Two broad strategies of electronic stabilization appear to have been widely deployed, namely -conjugation as in diaminosilylenes and -complexation as in decamethylsilicocene and silapyramidanes. Herein, we have attempted to identify quantitative metrics for the electronic stabilization of silylenes. Singlet-triplet gaps and electron affinities, both physical observables, appear to be useful in this regard. Thus, the most stable silylenes exhibit unusually high singlet-triplet gaps and very low or negative gas-phase electron affinities. Both metrics signify low electrophilicity, i.e., a low susceptibility to nucleophilic attack. The ionization potential associated with the Si-based lone pair also gives an indication of nucleophilic reactivity.

Keywords

silylene
carbene
diaminosilylene
decamethylsilicocene
silapyramidane

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
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Title
Optimized Cartesian coordinates (9 pages)
Description
DFT optimized geometries and frontier MOs
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