The project “Bismuth Goes Radical” deals with the controlled, stimulus-triggered generation of radical species under mild conditions, with the generation of unusual low-valent bismuth-based building blocks, and with di- or multinuclear bismuth compounds. These topics are investigated in the context of new approaches to controlled radical reactions.
Well-defined molecular bismuth compounds with known and novel bonding motifs have been synthesized, characterized, and evaluated with respect to their potential to engage in homolytic bond dissociation reactions, according to the general reaction equation R2Bi–X ⇌ R2Bi• + X•. Promising candidates have been subjected to stoichiometric and catalytic reactivity studies in thermally and in photochemically initiated reactions. In this context, N–N, P–P, As–As, Si–O, C–S, and C–C bond formation events have been realized. These investigations include comparative approaches, aiming at the evaluation of the role of the central atom (i.e. does the bismuth atom play a decisive role in the approach).
Molecular bismuth compounds have been designed and synthesized as precursors for the generation of short-lived, reactive low-valent bismuth compounds of the type Bi–R (R = simple, monoanionic ligand). These species evolve from a combination of two homolytic bond cleavage events. Due to their reactive nature, the conditions for their generation are decisive in order to realize selective follow-up reactions. Strategies that have been investigated involve the release of ring strain and the exploitation of energy gain due to re-aromatization events.
Dinuclear bismuth complexes have been conceptualized and synthesized, aiming to investigate unprecedented structural motifs in the context of strained compounds and organometallic species exhibiting electronic communication between two or more bismuth centers. Synthetic pathways involving radical reactions have been evaluated for species connecting two bismuth centers through different types of organic linkers. Following initial findings in this part of the project, the formation of multinuclear species has been investigated and efforts have been undertaken to elucidate the role of details in the course of these reactions, including concentration effects, solvent effects, subtle substituent effects, and templating strategies.