Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.142, No.20, 9396-9407, 2020
Too Persistent to Give Up: Aromaticity in Boron Clusters Survives Radical Structural Changes
o-C2B10H12 isomerizes to m-C2B10H12 upon heating at 400 degrees C. Deboronation in o-C2B10H12 is a relatively easy process, whereas it is more difficult in m-C2B10H12. These two experimental facts indicate that m-C2B10H12 is thermodynamically more stable than o-C2B10H12. On the other hand, it is widely accepted that closo-boranes and -carboranes are aromatic compounds. In this work, we relate the difficulty in the deboronation of the carboranes with their stability and aromaticity. We do this by combining lab work and DFT calculations. Computationally, our results show that the higher thermodynamic stability of m-C2B10H12 is not related to aromaticity differences but to the location of the C atoms in the carborane structure. It is also demonstrated that the aromaticity observed in closo-boranes and -carboranes is also present in their nido counterparts, and consequently, we conclude that aromaticity in boron dusters survives radical structural changes. Further, sandwich metallocenes (e.g., ferrocene) and sandwich metallabis(dicarbollides) (e.g., [Co(C2B9H11)(2)](-)) have traditionally been considered to be similar. Here it is shown that they are not. Metallabis(dicarbollides) display global aromaticity, whereas metallocenes present local aromaticity in the ligands. Remarkable and unique is the double probe given by H-1 and B-11 NMR tracing the reciprocally antipodal endocyclic open face H-ec and B-1. These magnetic studies have permitted one to correlate both nudei and relate them to a diatropic current in the plane at the middle of the nido-[C2B9H12](-). This observation is the first unique evidence that proves experimentally the existence of diatropic currents, and thence aromaticity, in dusters and is comparable to the existence of diatropic currents in planar aromatic compounds. Additionally, heteroboranes with two carbon atoms have been compared to heterocycles with two nitrogen or boron atoms, e.g., C2B10H12 carboranes versus planar N2C4H4 diazines or [B2C4H4](2-) diboratabenzenes, thereby proving the higher persistence of the aromaticity of the tridimensional compounds in heteroatom-substituted species. This research accounts very well for the "paradigm for the electron requirements of clusters", in which a closo-duster that is aromatic upon addition of 2(e-) becomes also an aromatic nido-species, and explains the informative schemes by Rudolph and Williams.