and (3) catalytic dehydropolymerization of tin dihydrides Oligo- or polystannanes were first described by
Löwig in 1852, only 2 years after
Edward Frankland's report on the isolation of the first
organotin compounds. Löwig's route involved treating an Sn/K and Sn/Na
alloys with
iodoethane, in the presence of
quartz sand which was used to control the
reaction rate. Products with elemental compositions close to those of oligo(diethyl
stannane)s or poly(diethylstannane) were obtained.
Cahours obtained similar products and attributed the formation of the so-called "stannic ethyl" to a reaction of the
Wurtz type. Already in 1858, "stannic ethyl" was formulated as a polymeric compound denoted with the composition n(SnC4H5). In 1917, Grüttner, who reinvestigated results on hexaethyl-
distannanes(H5C2)3Sn-Sn(C2H5)3 (reported by Ladenburg in 1870), confirmed the presence of Sn-Sn bonds and predicated for the first time that tin could form chain like compounds. In 1943, it was postulated that “diphenyltin” exists as a type of polymeric material because of its yellow color, and indeed a
bathochromic shift of the wavelength at maximum absorption with increasing number of Sn atoms was found later in the case of oligo(dibutylstannane)s comprising up to 15 Sn atoms. The
Wurtz reaction is still used for the preparation of poly(dialkylstannane)s. Treatment of dialkyltin dichlorides with sodium lead to polystannanes of high
molar mass, however, in low yields and with formation of (cyclic) oligomers. Other efforts to prepare high molar mass polystannanes by electrochemical reactions or by catalytic dehydropolymerization of dialkylstannanes (R2SnH2) were also made. Unfortunately, frequently, the polymers prepared by those methods were not isolated and typically contained significant fractions of cyclic oligomers. Alternatively, alkyltin halides react with excess
electride in ammonia solutions to give metal alkylstannides. Added alkyltin halides then couple to the stannides to give polystannanes. == Linear polystannanes ==