Crossed Beam Experiments and Computational Studies of Pathways to the Preparation of Singlet Ethynylsilylene (HCCSiH; X1A′): The Silacarbene Counterpart of Triplet Propargylene (HCCCH; X3B)

Adam Rettig, Martin Head-Gordon*, Srinivas Doddipatla, Zhenghai Yang, Ralf I. Kaiser*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Ethynylsilylene (HCCSiH; X1A′) has been prepared in the gas phase through the elementary reaction of singlet dicarbon (C2) with silane (SiH4) under single-collision conditions. Electronic structure calculations reveal a barrierless reaction pathway involving 1,1-insertion of dicarbon into one of the silicon-hydrogen bonds followed by hydrogen migration to form the 3-sila-methylacetylene (HCCSiH3) intermediate. The intermediate undergoes unimolecular decomposition through molecular hydrogen loss to ethynylsilylene (HCCSiH; Cs; X1A′). The dicarbon-silane system defines a benchmark to explore the consequence of a single collision between the simplest "only carbon"molecule (dicarbon) with the prototype of a closed-shell silicon hydride (silane) yielding a nonclassical silacarbene, whose molecular geometry and electronic structure are quite distinct from the isovalent triplet propargylene (HCCCH; C2; 3B) carbon-counterpart. These organosilicon transients cannot be prepared through traditional organic, synthetic methods, thus opening up a versatile path to access the previously largely elusive class of silacarbenes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)10768-10776
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Physical Chemistry Letters
Volume12
Issue number44
DOIs
StatePublished - 11 Nov 2021
Externally publishedYes

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