Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.39, No.18, 4119-4122, 2000
Electron transfer. 144. Reductions with germanium(II)
Solutions 0.2-0.4 M in Ge(II) and 6 M in HCl, generated by reaction of Ge(IV) with H3PO2, are stable for more than 3 weeks and can be diluted 200-fold with dilute HCl to give GeCl3-preparations to be used in redox studies. Kinetic profiles for the reduction of Fe(III) by Ge(II), as catalyzed by Cu(II), implicate the odd-electron intermediate, Ge(III), which is formed from Cu(II) and Ge(II) (k = 30 M-1 s(-1) in 0.5 M HCl at 24 degrees C) and which is consumed by reaction with Fe(III) (k = 6 x 10(2) M-1 s(-1)). A slower direct reaction between Ge(II) and Fe(III) (k = 0.66 M-1 s(-1)) can be detected in 1.0 M HCl. The reaction of Ge(II) with I-3(-) in 0.01-0.50 M iodide is zero order in oxidant and appears to proceed via a rate-determining heterolysis of a Ge(II)-OH2 species (k = 0.045 s(-1)) which is subject to H+-catalysis. Reductions of IrCl62- and PtCl62- by Ge(II) are strongly Cl--catalyzed. The Lr(IV) reaction proceeds through a pair of le(-) changes, of which the initial conversion to Ge(III) is rate-determining, whereas the Pt(IV) oxidant probably utilizes (at least in part) an inner-sphere Pt-IV-Cl-Ge-II bridge in which chlorine is transferred (as Cl+) from oxidant to reductant. The 2e(-) reagent, Ge(II), like its 5s(2) counterpart, Ln(I), can partake in le-transactions, but requires more severe constraints: the coreagent must be more powerfully oxidizing and the reaction medium more halide-rich.