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Properties | |
Chemical formula | C5H15Mo |
Molar mass | 171.13 g·mol |
Appearance | turquoise blue crystals |
Boiling point | decomposes at −10°C |
Structure | |
Crystal structure | tetragonal |
Space group | I4 |
Lattice constant | a = 7.680, b = 7.680, c = 6.490 |
Lattice volume (V) | 382.80 |
Formula units (Z) | 2 |
Related compounds | |
Related compounds | Pentamethylarsenic Pentamethylbismuth Pentamethylantimony pentamethyltantalum Hexamethylmolybdenum |
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C , 100 kPa). Infobox references |
Pentamethylmolybdenum is an organomolybdenum compound containing five methyl groups bound to a central molybdenum atom. The shape of the molecule is a square pyramid.
Production
Pentamethylmolybdenum can be prepared from molybdenum pentachloride and dimethyl zinc at low temperature between −70 and −20. Another possible creation route, is from molybdenum oxychloride. Pentamethylmolybdenum is paramagnetic with one unpaired electron. The character of this electron is two thirds 4dz and one third 4dx−y.
Properties
Pentamethylmolybdenum is unstable and sensitive to oxygen. It turns black when exposed to air, or heated over −10°C. The Raman spectrum has bands at 1181, 960, 90, 882, 783, 672, 620, 565, 523, 507, 451, 366, 308, 267 and 167 cm.
References
- Vreshch V. (2018). "Crystal Structure of Pentamethylmolybdenum(V)". crystallography-online.com.
- ^ Roessler, Beatrice; Kleinhenz, Sven; Seppelt, Konrad (2000). "Pentamethylmolybdenum". Chemical Communications (12): 1039–1040. doi:10.1039/b000987n.
- Werner, Helmut (2008). Landmarks in Organo-Transition Metal Chemistry: A Personal View. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 309. ISBN 9780387098487.