Silanone

Silicon analogue of a ketone From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A silanone in chemistry is the silicon analogue of a ketone. The general description for this class of organic compounds is R1R2Si=O, with silicon connected to a terminal oxygen atom via a double bond and also with two organic residues (R).[1] Silanones are extremely reactive[1] and until 2013 were only detected by argon matrix isolation[2][3] or in the gas phase[4] but not isolated. A synthesis of a stable silanone was reported in 2014. Silanones are of some interest to academic research, with their reactivity being of some relevance to the double bond rule.

The general structure of a silanone

Silanones are unstable and favor oligomerisation to siloxanes. The reason for this instability is the weak pi bond with a small HOMO–LUMO energy gap caused by an unfavorable overlap between the p-orbitals of silicon and oxygen. A second reason for the observed instability is the strongly polarized silicon–oxygen bond, Siδ+–Oδ−.[1]

History

The first to postulate a silanone were Kipping & Lloyd in 1901,[5] but their products were in fact siloxanes. It was not until 2014 that a stable silanone was reported.[6] In this compound, silicon is bonded to a SIDipp (1,3-bis(2,6-iPr2-C6H3)imidazolidin-2-ylidene) group and a (Cp*)Cr(CO)3 group. Its stability is owed to the direct coordination of silicon to chromium and to steric shielding. The reported Si=O bond length is 1.526 Å, in line with expectations. It has been described as a cationic metallosilanone.[1]

Other strategies have recently been used to stabilise silanones,[7] for example coordination to Lewis acids or bases[8] and steric shielding.[9]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI