The oxidation of triphenylphosphine by perfluorinated phenaziniumF aluminate in difluorobenzene affords hexaaryl-1,2-diphosphonium dialuminate 1. Dication 12+ is valence isoelectronic with elusive hexaphenylethane, where instead the formation of a mixture of the trityl radical and Gomberg’s dimer is favored. Quantum-chemical calculations in combination with Raman/IR spectroscopies rationalize the stability of the P–P bonded dimer in 12+ and suggest, akin to the halogens, facile homolytic as well as heterolytic scission. Thus, 12+ serves as a surrogate of both the triphenylphosphorandiylium dication (Ph3P2+) and the triphenylphosphine radical monocation (Ph3P·+). Treating 1 with dimethylaminopyridine (DMAP) or tBu3P replaces triphenylphosphine under heterolytic P–P bond scission. Qualifying as a superoxidant (E vs Fc/Fc+ = +1.44 V), 1 oxidizes trimethylphosphine. Based on halide abstraction experiments (–BF4, –PF6, –SbCl6, –SbF6) as well as the deoxygenation of triethylphosphine oxide, triflate anions as well as toluic acid, 1 also features Lewis superacidity. The controlled hydrolysis affords Hendrickson’s reagent, which itself finds broad use as a dehydration agent. Formally, homolytic P–P bond scission occurs with diphenyldisulfide (PhSSPh) and the triple bonds in benzo- and acetonitrile. The irradiation by light cleaves the P–P bond homolytically and generates transient triphenylphosphine radical cations, which engage in H-atom abstraction as well as CH phosphoranylation.
It has been recently published open access in Journal of the American Chemical Society:
Fabian Dankert, Simon P. Muhm, Chandan Nandi, Sergi Danés, Sneha Mullassery, Petra Herbeck-Engel, Bernd Morgenstern, Robert Weiss*, Pedro Salvador*, and Dominik Munz*
Hexaphenyl-1,2-Diphosphonium Dication [Ph3P–PPh3]2+: Superacid, Superoxidant, or Super Reagent?
J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2025, ASAP
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.5c01271
Girona, May 6th, 2025
For more info: ges.iqcc@udg.edu