Publications
Synthesis and Characterization of Tris(trimethylsilyl)siloxide Derivatives of Early Transition Metal Alkoxides That Thermally Convert to Varied Ceramic-Silica Architecture Materials
Boyle, Timothy J.; Sears, Jeremiah M.; Perales, Diana; Cramer, Roger E.; Lu, Ping; Chan, Rana O.; Hernandez-Sanchez, Bernadette A.
In an effort to generate single-source precursors for the production of metal-siloxide (MSiOx) materials, the tris(trimethylsilyl)silanol (H-SST or H-OSi(SiMe3)3 (1) ligand was reacted with a series of group 4 and 5 metal alkoxides. The group 4 products were crystallographically characterized as [Ti(SST)2(OR)2] (OR = OPri (2), OBut (3), ONep (4)); [Ti(SST)3(OBun)] (5); [Zr(SST)2(OBut)2(py)] (6); [Zr(SST)3(OR)] (OR = OBut (7), ONep, (8)); [Hf(SST)2(OBut)2] (9); and [Hf(SST)2(ONep)2(py)n] (n = 1 (10), n = 2 (10a)) where OPri = OCH(CH3)2, OBut = OC(CH3)3, OBun = O(CH2)3CH3, ONep = OCH2C(CH3)3, py = pyridine. The crystal structures revealed varied SST substitutions for: monomeric Ti species that adopted a tetrahedral (T-4) geometry; monomeric Zr compounds with coordination that varied from T-4 to trigonal bipyramidal (TBPY-5); and monomeric Hf complexes isolated in a TBPY-5 geometry. For the group 5 species, the following derivatives were structurally identified as [V(SST)3(py)2] (11), [Nb(SST)3(OEt)2] (12), [Nb(O)(SST)3(py)] (13), 2[H][(Nb(μ-O)2(SST))6(μ6-O)] (14), [Nb8O10(OEt)18(SST)2·1/5Na2O] (15), [Ta(SST)(μ-OEt)(OEt)3]2 (16), and [Ta(SST)3(OEt)2] (17) where OEt = OCH2CH3. The group 5 monomeric complexes were solved in a TBPY-5 arrangement, whereas the Ta of the dinculear 16 was solved in an octahedral coordination environment. Thermal analyses of these precursors revealed a stepwise loss of ligand, which indicated their potential utility for generating the MSiOx materials. The complexes were thermally processed (350-1100 °C, 4 h, ambient atmosphere), but instead of the desired MSiOx, transmission electron microscopy analyses revealed that fractions of the group 4 and group 5 precursors had formed unusual metal oxide silica architectures.