Oxidation of phosphines containing two or three tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) or o-dimethyl-TTF moieties. Evidence for formation of radical polycations

Abstract
Stepwise oxidation of tetrathiafulvalenyl(diphenyl)phosphine (1), 4′,5′-dimethyltetrathiafulvalen-4-yl(diphenyl)phosphine (1a), bis(tetrathiafulvalenyl)phenylphosphine (2), bis(4′,5′-dimethylt-tetrathiafulvalen-4-yl)phenylphosphine (2a), tris(tetrathiafulvalenyl)phosphine (3) and tris(4′, 5′-dimethyltetrathiafulvalen-4-yl)phosphine (3a) was followed by EPR and ENDOR spectroscopy, and cyclic voltammetry. Each of the tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) or 4,5-dimethyltetrathiafulvalene (o-DMTTF) moieties in 1–3a donates two electrons, so that exhaustive oxidation at potentials below 1 V (vs. SCE) leads to the dications 12+ or 1a2+, the tetracations 24+ or 2a4+ and the hexacations 36+ or 3a6+. In 2, 2a, 3 and 3a, the electrons are removed one-by-one from different TTF or o-DMTTF moieties. In the initially formed radical cations 2˙+, 2a˙+, 3˙+ and 3a˙+, the electron hole is delocalized over all TTF or o-DMTTF moieties, two in 2˙+ or 2a˙+ and three in 3˙+ or 3a˙+. On the other hand, in paramagnetic species produced by further oxidation and also giving rise to well defined EPR and ENDOR spectra, the unpaired electron appears on the hyperfine time-scale as localized in only one donor moiety. These species are supposed to be the radical trications 2˙3+ or 2a˙3+ and the radical pentacations 3˙5+ or 3a˙5+. The intermediately occurring dication 22+ or 2a2+ and 32+ or 3a2+, as well as the tetracations 34+ or 3a4+, should have a triplet ground-state, while the trications 33+ or 3a3+ are expected to be quartet species.