Abbreviated structure of titanium(IV) ethoxide tetramer. The ethoxide ligands are represented by O's. The terminal ethoxide ligands are designated by Oa, the doubly bridging ligands by Ob, and the triply bridging ligands by Oc.
Titanium ethoxide is a chemical compound with the formula Ti4(OCH2CH3)16. It is a commercially available colorless liquid that is soluble in organic solvents but hydrolyzes readily. Its structure is more complex than suggested by its empirical formula. Like other alkoxides of titanium(IV) and zirconium(IV), it finds used in organic synthesis and materials science.[1]
Syntheses
Titanium ethoxide is prepared by treating titanium tetrachloride with ethanol in the presence of an amine:[2]
TiCl4 + 4 EtOH + 4 Et3N → Ti(OEt)4 + 4 Et3NHCl
The purity of titanium ethoxide is commonly assayed by proton NMR spectroscopy. Ti(OEt)4 1H NMR (90 MHz, chloroform-d, ppm): 4.36 (quartet, 8H, CH2), 1.27 (triplet, 12H, CH3).[3]
Structure
Both Ti(OEt)4 exist mainly as tetramers with an octahedral coordination environment around the metal centers. There are two types of titanium centers, depending on the number of terminal vs bridging alkoxide ligands. Zr(OEt)4 is structurally similar.[2][4] The virtual symmetry of the M4O16 core structure for the tetramer structures of these compounds is C2h.[5]
Related compounds
Titanium methoxide
Like the ethoxide, titanium methoxide Ti(OMe)4 exists as a tetramer with each of the TiIV metal centers having an octahedral coordination environment.[6]
With bulky alkyl groups, Ti(OiPr)4 in contrast exist as a monomer with a tetrahedral environment around the Ti center. This lower degree of coordination to the metal center is attributed to the steric bulk of the iPr groups versus the n-alkyl groups, this serves to prevent bridging interactions between the metal centers.[7]
Zirconium ethoxide
Zirconium ethoxide can be prepared in a manner similar but not identical to the titanium compound:[8]
ZrCl4 + 5 NaOEt + EtOH → NaH[Zr(OEt)6] + 4 NaCl
NaH[Zr(OEt)6] + HCl → Zr(OEt)4 + NaCl + 2 EtOH
A more common synthesis for zirconium ethoxide is to treat zirconium tetrachloride with the desired alcohol and ammonia:[8]
ZrCl4 + 4 ROH + 4 NH3 → Zr(OR)4 + 4 NH4Cl
Zirconium ethoxide can also be prepared with zirconocene dichloride:[9]
Zr(OnPr)4 also adopts the titanium ethoxide structure.[4][5]
Reactions
Hydrolysis of Ti alkoxides can be used to deposit TiO2:[10]
Ti(OEt)4 + 2 H2O → TiO2 + 4 EtOH
The course of the hydrolysis is affected by the presence of base or acid catalysts for the hydrolysis. Generally acid-catalysis yields a sol where the polymer chains are randomly oriented and linear. In the base-mediated case bushy clusters or crosslinked networks are produced, these structures can trap solvent and reaction byproducts and form a gel coating. This is the sol-gel process. [11] Intermediates in the hydrolysis have been crystallized. They feature interior oxides in addition to the ethoxide on the exterior of the clusters.[12]
The high reactivity of titanium ethoxide toward water is exploited in its use in condensation reactions.[13]
^ abDay, Victor W.; Klemperer, Walter G.; Pafford, Margaret M. (2001). "Isolation and Structural Characterization of Tetra-n-propyl Zirconate in Hydrocarbon Solution and the Solid State". Inorg. Chem.40 (23): 5738–5746. doi:10.1021/ic010776g. PMID11681880.
^Ghosh, Rajshekhar; Nethaji, Munirathinam; Samuelson, Ashoka G. (2005). "Reversible double insertion of aryl isocyanates into the Ti–O bond of titanium(IV) isopropoxide". J. Organomet. Chem.690 (5): 1282–1293. doi:10.1016/j.jorganchem.2004.11.038.
^Gray, Donald R.; Brubaker, Carl H. (1971). "Preparation and characterization of a series of chloroalkoxobis(cyclopentadienyl)zirconium(IV) and dialkoxobis(cyclopentadienyl)zirconium(IV) compounds". Inorg. Chem.10 (10): 2143–2146. doi:10.1021/ic50104a010.
^Schubert, U. (2003). "Sol–Gel Processing of Metal Compounds". In McCleverty, J. A.; Meyer, T. J. (eds.). Comprehensive Coordination Chemistry II. Reference Module in Chemistry, Molecular Sciences and Chemical Engineering. Vol. 7. Pergamon. pp. 629–656. doi:10.1016/B0-08-043748-6/06213-7. ISBN978-0-12-409547-2.
^Coppens, Philip; Chen, Yang; Trzop, Elżbieta (2014). "Crystallography and Properties of Polyoxotitanate Nanoclusters". Chemical Reviews. 114 (19): 9645–9661. doi:10.1021/cr400724e. PMID24820889.