Chemical compound
Tungsten hexachloride is an inorganic chemical compound of tungsten and chlorine with the chemical formula W Cl 6 . This dark violet-blue compound exists as volatile crystals under standard conditions . It is an important starting reagent in the preparation of tungsten compounds.[ 1] Other examples of charge-neutral hexachlorides are rhenium(VI) chloride and molybdenum(VI) chloride . The highly volatile tungsten hexafluoride is also known.
As a d0 atom, tungsten hexachloride is diamagnetic .
Preparation and structure
Tungsten hexachloride can be prepared by chlorinating tungsten metal in a sealed tube at 600 °C:[ 2]
W + 3 Cl2 → WCl6
Tungsten hexachloride exists in both blue and red polymorphs , referred to respectively as α and β. The wine-red β can be obtained by rapid cooling, whereas the blue α form is more stable at room temperature . Although these polymorphs are distinctly colored, their molecular structures are very similar. Both polymorphs feature W Cl 6 molecules that have octahedral geometry , in which all six W–Cl bonds are equivalent, and their length is equal to 224–226 pm . The densities are very similar: 3.68 g/cm3 for α and 3.62 g/cm3 for β. The low-temperature form is slightly more dense, as expected.[ 3]
Reactions
Tungsten hexachloride is readily hydrolyzed , even by moist air , giving the orange oxychlorides WOCl4 and WO2 Cl2 , and subsequently, tungsten trioxide . WCl6 is soluble in carbon disulfide , carbon tetrachloride , and phosphorus oxychloride .[ 2]
Methylation with trimethylaluminium affords hexamethyl tungsten :
WCl6 + 3 Al2 (CH3 )6 → W(CH3 )6 + 3 Al2 (CH3 )4 Cl2
Treatment with butyl lithium affords a reagent that is useful for deoxygenation of epoxides .[ 4]
The chloride ligands in WCl6 can be replaced by many anionic ligands including: bromide , thiocyanate , alkoxide , alkyl and aryl ).
Reduction of WCl6 can be effected with a mixture of tetrachloroethylene and tetraphenylarsonium chloride :[ 5]
2 WCl6 + Cl2 C=CCl2 + 2 (C6 H5 )4 AsCl → 2 (C6 H5 )4 As[WCl6 ] + Cl3 C−CCl3
The W(V) hexachloride is a derivative of tungsten(V) chloride .
It reacts with arsenic or hydrogen arsenide to form tungsten arsenide .[ 6] [ 7]
Safety considerations
WCl6 is an aggressively corrosive oxidant , and hydrolyzes to release hydrogen chloride .
References
^ J. W. Herndon; M. E. Jung (2007). "Tungsten(VI) Chloride". Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis . Wiley. doi :10.1002/9780470842898.rt430.pub2 . ISBN 978-0-471-93623-7 . .
^ a b M. H. Lietzke; M. L. Holt (1950). "Tungsten(VI) Chloride (Tungsten Hexachloride)". Inorganic Syntheses . Vol. 3. p. 163. doi :10.1002/9780470132340.ch44 . ISBN 978-0-470-13162-6 .
^ J. C. Taylor; P. W. Wilson (1974). "The Structure of β-Tungsten Hexachloride by Powder Neutron and X-ray Diffraction" . Acta Crystallographica . B30 (5): 1216– 1220. Bibcode :1974AcCrB..30.1216T . doi :10.1107/S0567740874004572 . .
^ M. A. Umbreit, K. B. Sharpless (1990). "Deoxygenation of Epoxides with Lower Valent Tungsten Halides: trans-Cyclododecene" . Organic Syntheses ; Collected Volumes , vol. 7, p. 121 .
^ Uhl, G.; Hey, E.; Becker, G.; Weller, F.; Dehnicke, K. (1983). "Über die Reaktion von 2,2-Dimethylpropylidinphosphan mit Wolframhexachlorid; die Kristallstrukturen von [(Cl3 PO)WCL4 (H9 C4 CCC4 H9 )] und [(H5 C6 )4 As][WCL6 ]" . Zeitschrift für Anorganische und Allgemeine Chemie . 497 (2): 213– 223. doi :10.1002/zaac.19834970221 .
^ Lassner, Erik; Schubert, Wolf-Dieter (2012-12-06). Tungsten . Springer Science & Business Media. p. 145. ISBN 978-1-4615-4907-9 .
^ Meyer, R. J. (2013-09-03). Wolfram (in German). Springer-Verlag. p. 207. ISBN 978-3-662-13401-6 .
Tungsten(0) Tungsten(II) Tungsten(III) Tungsten(IV) Tungsten(V) Tungsten(VI)
Salts and covalent derivatives of the
chloride ion