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What are organometallic compounds?

Organometallic compounds are chemical compounds that contain at least one bond between a carbon atom of an organic group and a metal (which can be a main-group metal, transition metal, or metalloid such as boron, silicon, or arsenic).

Key Features:

  • They always involve a metal–carbon bond.
  • The organic part may be an alkyl, aryl, allyl, cyclopentadienyl, or other carbon-containing ligand.
  • The metal can range from alkali metals (e.g., sodium, lithium) to transition metals (e.g., iron, nickel, platinum).

Examples:

  • Grignard reagents: RMgX (where R = alkyl or aryl, X = halogen)
  • Organolithium compounds: RLi
  • Ferrocene: (C₅H₅)₂Fe (a “sandwich compound”)
  • Tetraethyl lead: Pb(C₂H₅)₄ (historically used in gasoline additives)

Importance:

  • Widely used in catalysis (e.g., Ziegler–Natta catalysts for polymerization, organopalladium compounds in cross-coupling reactions).
  • Essential in organic synthesis (forming C–C bonds, nucleophilic addition to carbonyls).
  • Useful in materials science (semiconductors, coatings, etc.).

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