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Triphenylarsine is the chemical compound with the formula As(C6H5)3. This organoarsenic compound, often abbreviated AsPh3, is a colorless crystalline solid that is used as a ligand and a reagent in coordination chemistry and organic synthesis. The molecule is pyramidal with As-C distances of 1.942–1.956 Å and C-As-C angles of 99.6–100.5°.[1]

This compound is prepared by the reaction of arsenic trichloride with chlorobenzene using sodium as the reducing agent:[2]

AsCl3 + 3 PhCl + 6 Na → AsPh3 + 6 NaCl

Reactions

Reaction of triphenylarsine with lithium gives lithium diphenylarsenide:[3]

AsPh3 + 2 Li → LiAsPh2 + LiPh

Triphenylarsine is the precursor to tetraphenylarsonium chloride, [AsPh4]Cl, a popular precipitating agent.[2]

AsPh3 forms metal complexes with metals. Most are analogues of the corresponding triphenylphosphine derivatives. Examples include [IrCl(CO)(AsPh3)]2, [RhCl(AsPh3)3], and [Fe(CO)4(AsPh3)].[4]

Tetraphenylarsonium chloride is prepared from triphenylarsine:[5]

(C6H5)3As + Br2 → (C6H5)3AsBr2
(C6H5)3AsBr2 + H2O → (C6H5)3AsO + 2 HBr
(C6H5)3AsO + C6H5MgBr → (C6H5)4AsOMgBr
(C6H5)4AsOMgBr + 3 HCl → (C6H5)4AsCl.HCl + MgBrCl
(C6H5)4AsCl.HCl + NaOH → (C6H5)4AsCl + NaCl + H2O

References

  1. ^ Mazhar-ul-Haque, Hasan A. Tayim, Jamil Ahmed, and William Horne "Crystal and molecular structure of triphenylarsine" Journal of Chemical Crystallography Volume 15, Number 6 / 1985. doi:10.1007/BF01164771
  2. ^ a b Shriner, R. L.; Wolf, C. N. (1963). "Tetraphenylarsonium Chloride Hydrochloride". Organic Syntheses{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link); Collected Volumes, vol. 4, p. 910. article
  3. ^ W. Levason; C. A. Mcauliffe (1976). "Cis -2-Diphenylarsinovinyldiphenylphosphine and 2-Diphenylarsinoethyldiphenylphosphine". cis-2-Diphenylarsinovinyldiphenylphosphine and 2-Diphenylarsinoethyldiphenylphosphine. Inorganic Syntheses. Vol. 16. pp. 188–192. doi:10.1002/9780470132470.ch50. ISBN 978-0-470-13247-0.
  4. ^ C. A. McAuliffe, ed. (1973). Transition Metal Complexes of Phosphorus, Arsenic, and Antimony Ligands. J. Wiley. ISBN 0-470-58117-4.
  5. ^ Shriner, R. L.; Wolf, Calvin N. (1950). "Tetraphenylarsonium Chloride Hydrochloride". Organic Syntheses. 30: 95. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.030.0095.
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