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Molecule containing a nitrogen atom with four unbonded electrons (:Ṅ·) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In chemistry, a nitrene or imene (R−:Ṅ·) is the nitrogen analogue of a carbene. The nitrogen atom is uncharged and monovalent,[1] so it has only 6 electrons in its valence level—two covalent bonded and four non-bonded electrons. It is therefore considered an electrophile due to the unsatisfied octet. A nitrene is a reactive intermediate and is involved in many chemical reactions.[2][3] The simplest nitrene, HN, is called imidogen, and that term is sometimes used as a synonym for the nitrene class.[4]
In the simplest case, the linear N–H molecule (imidogen) has its nitrogen atom sp hybridized, with two of its four non-bonded electrons as a lone pair in an sp orbital and the other two occupying a degenerate pair of p orbitals. The electron configuration is consistent with Hund's rule: the low energy form is a triplet with one electron in each of the p orbitals and the high energy form is the singlet with an electron pair filling one p orbital and the other p orbital vacant.[5]
As with carbenes, a strong correlation exists between the spin density on the nitrogen atom which can be calculated in silico and the zero-field splitting parameter D which can be derived experimentally from electron spin resonance.[6] Small nitrenes such as NH or CF3N have D values around 1.8 cm−1 with spin densities close to a maximum value of 2. At the lower end of the scale are molecules with low D (< 0.4) values and spin density of 1.2 to 1.4 such as 9-anthrylnitrene and 9-phenanthrylnitrene.
Because nitrenes are so reactive, they are rarely isolated. Instead, they are formed as reactive intermediates during a reaction. There are two common ways to generate nitrenes:
Since formation of the nitrene typically starts from a diamagnetic precursor, the direct chemical product is a singlet nitrene, which then relaxes to its ground state triplet state. As has been shown for phenylazide as a model system, the direct photoproduct of photochemical-induced N2 loss can either be the singlet or triplet nitrene.[7][8][9] By using a triplet sensitizer, the triplet nitrene can also be formed without initial formation of the singlet nitrene.[10]
Although highly reactive, some nitrenes could be isolated and characterized recently.
In 2019, a triplet nitrene was isolated by Betley and Lancaster, stabilized by coordination to a copper center in a bulky ligand.[11] Later on, Schneider and coworkers characterized Pd and Pt triplet metallonitrenes, where the organic residue is replaced by a metal.[12][13][14] In 2024, the groups of Beckmann, Ye and Tan reported the isolation and characterization of organic triplet nitrenes, which are protected from chemical reactivity by an extremely bulky ligand.[15][16]
Nitrene reactions include:
For several compounds containing both a nitrene group and a free radical group an ESR high-spin quartet has been recorded (matrix, cryogenic temperatures). One of these has an amine oxide radical group incorporated,[26] another system has a carbon radical group.[27]
In this system one of the nitrogen unpaired electrons is delocalized in the aromatic ring making the compound a σ–σ–π triradical. A carbene nitrogen radical (imidyl radical) resonance structure makes a contribution to the total electronic picture.
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