Phenylcopper Explained

Phenylcopper is an organometallic chemical compound of copper.[1] Its chemical formula is .[2]

Synthesis

Phenylcopper was the first known organocopper compound and was first prepared in 1923 from phenylmagnesium iodide and copper(I) iodide and in 1936 by Henry Gilman by transmetallation of phenylmagnesium iodide with copper(I) chloride.

Phenylcopper can be obtained by reacting phenyl lithium with copper(I) bromide in diethyl ether.[3]

Properties

Phenylcopper is a colorless solid substance that is soluble in pyridine. It can be stored for a few days without decomposition under nitrogen or in vacuum. Rapid decomposition takes place in air. Water decomposes phenylcopper to form red copper(I) oxide and varying amounts of benzene and biphenyl. It forms stable complexes with tributylphosphine and triphenylphosphine.[4]

When dissolved in dimethyl sulfide, phenylcopper forms dimers and trimers (aggregates of two or three molecules).[5]

Related structures

A diphenylcuprate(I) ion exists that can form a salt with lithium (Li+[Cu(C<sub>6</sub>H<sub>5</sub>)<sub>2</sub>]),[5] an example of a Gilman reagent.

Notes and References

  1. Costa . G. . Camus . A. . Gatti . L. . Marsich . N. . On phenylcopper . . 1966-06-01 . 5 . 6 . 568–572 . 10.1016/S0022-328X(00)85161-X . 2 June 2021 . en . 0022-328X.
  2. Frański . Rafał . Kozik . Tomasz . Staniszewski . Bartosz . Urbaniak . Włodzimierz . Phenylcopper(I) clusters in the gas phase obtained by laser desorption/ionization from bis(dibenzoylmethane)copper(II) . Open Chemistry . 508–512 . en . 10.2478/s11532-010-0017-z . 2010-06-01. 8 . 3 . 94008194 . free .
  3. Ryang . Membo . Yoshida . Kunihisa . Yokoo . Hidejiro . Tsutsumi . Shigeru . The Reaction of Carbon Monoxide with Organometallic Compounds. X. The Reaction of Carbon Monoxide with Phenyl Derivatives of Transition Metals . . April 1965 . 38 . 4 . 636–639 . 10.1246/bcsj.38.636 . en . 0009-2673. free.
  4. Book: Zvi . Rappoport. Ilan. Marek . The Chemistry of Organocopper Compounds . . 9780470772966 . 2010 . 152.
  5. Bertz . Steven H. . Dabbagh . Gary . He . Xiaoming . Power . Philip P. . New copper chemistry. 21. Phenylcopper(I) and diphenylcuprate(I): characterization of aggregation states by carbon-13 NMR spectroscopy . . December 1993 . 115 . 24 . 11640–11641 . 10.1021/ja00077a090.