Molybdenum(V) chloride
Molybdenum chloride is the inorganic compound with the empirical formula. This dark volatile solid is used in research to prepare other molybdenum compounds. It is moisture-sensitive and soluble in chlorinated solvents.
Structure
Usually called molybdenum pentachloride, it is in fact partly a dimer with the molecular formula. In the dimer, each molybdenum has local octahedral symmetry and two chlorides bridge between the molybdenum centers. A similar structure is also found for the pentachlorides of W, Nb and Ta. In the gas phase and partly in solution, the dimers partially dissociate to give a monomeric. The monomer is paramagnetic, with one unpaired electron per Mo center, reflecting the fact that the formal oxidation state is +5, leaving one valence electron on the metal center.Preparation and properties
is prepared by chlorination of Mo metal but also chlorination of. The unstable hexachloride is not produced in this way.is reduced by acetonitrile:
Molybdenum(IV) bromide is prepared by treatment of with hydrogen bromide:
The reaction proceeds via the unstable molybdenum bromide, which releases bromine at room temperature.
is a good Lewis acid toward non-oxidizable ligands. It forms an adduct with chloride to form. In organic synthesis, the compound finds occasional use in chlorinations, deoxygenation, and oxidative coupling reactions.
Although it polymerizes tetrahydrofuran, is stable in diethyl ether. Reduction of such solutions with tin gives and, depending on conditions.