Chemistry of polynuclear compounds. Part XXII. Protonation of triosmium dodecacarbonyl and some related compounds

Abstract
Dodecacarbonyltriosmium dissolves in cold concentrated sulphuric acid to give a solution containing the hydridospecies [HOs3(CO)12]+. On heating the solution at 100° this protonated species is converted first into a second hydrido-species (not characterised) and finally [HOs(CO)5]+ which has also been obtained by the protonation of osmium pentacarbonyl in concentrated sulphuric acid. Sulphuric acid solutions of tertiary phosphine-substituted derivatives of [Os3(CO)12] have been shown to contain dihydrido-species of the type [H2Os3(CO)12-xLx]2+(x= 1–3; L = PEt3 or PMePh2) and from these solutions have been isolated the salts [H2Os3(CO)9(PEt3)3](PF6)2 and [HOs3(CO)9L3]PF6(L = PEt3 or PMePh2). The latter exists in two forms, one yellow and one orange. There is some evidence that the yellow form may be an equimolar mixture of isomers. The structures of these complexes are discussed and shown, unambiguously in certain cases, to contain bridging hydrido-ligands.