dc.description.abstract | As part of our efforts to develop rhenium-oxo corroles as photosensitizers for oxygen sensing and photodynamic therapy, we investigated the potential <i>β</i>-perhalogenation of five ReO <i>meso</i>-tris(<i>para</i>-X-phenyl)corroles, Re[T<i>p</i>XPC](O) (X = CF<sub>3</sub>, H, F, CH<sub>3</sub>, and OCH<sub>3</sub>), with elemental chlorine and bromine. With Cl<sub>2</sub>, <i>β</i>-octachlorinated products Re[Cl<sub>8</sub>T<i>p</i>XPC](O) were rapidly obtained for X = CF<sub>3</sub>, H, and CH<sub>3</sub>, but X = OCH<sub>3</sub> resulted in overchlorination on the <i>meso</i>-aryl groups. Full <i>β</i>-octabromination proved slower relative to Cu and Ir corroles, but the desired Re[Br<sub>8</sub>T<i>p</i>XPC](O) products were finally obtained for X = H and F after a week at room temperature. For X = CH<sub>3</sub> and OCH<sub>3</sub>, these conditions led to undecabrominated products Re[Br<sub>11</sub>T<i>p</i>XPC](O). Compared to the <i>β</i>-unsubstituted starting materials, the <i>β</i>-octahalogenated products were found to exhibit sharp <sup>1</sup>H NMR signals at room temperature, indicating that the aryl groups are locked in place by the <i>β</i>-halogens, and substantially redshifted Soret and Q bands. Single-crystal X-ray structures of Re[Cl<sub>8</sub>T<i>p</i>CF<sub>3</sub>PC](O), Re[Cl<sub>8</sub>T<i>p</i>CH<sub>3</sub>PC](O), and Re[Br<sub>8</sub>T<i>p</i>FPC](O) revealed mild saddling for one Cl<sub>8</sub> structure and the Br<sub>8</sub> structure. These structural variations, however, appear too insignificant to explain the slowness of the <i>β</i>-octabromination protocols, which seems best attributed to the deactivating influence of the high-valent Re center. | en_US |