Abstract
Since, the isolation of the first stable formally quintuple bonded chromium dimer Ar'CrCrAr' (Ar' = 2,6-( 2,6-(Pr2C6H3)-Pr-i)(2)C6H3) in 2005 by Power and coworkers, the chemistry of high bond order molecules has experienced a renaissance and again has become an emerging field. A number of stable homobimetallic compounds of chromium and molybdenum, containing mostly sterically bulky N-ligands have been isolated and experimentally and theoretically studied within this renaissance. On one hand, it has led to complexes with ultrashort metal-metal distances and an understanding of how the bond length can be rationally tuned, inclusive of the limitations of the shortening concept. On the other hand, the reactivity of the bimetallic platform that stores 10 electrons gave rise to unexpected reactivity patterns. Very recently, it was shown that quintuple bonding is not limited to homobimetallic group VI metals and a heterobimetallic Cr-Mn complex has been reported. In this review, key compounds of the research field of quintuple bonding are discussed. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.