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imido

Imido is a term used in chemistry to describe a nitrogen-centered fragment that functions as a ligand or substituent in two closely related contexts: organometallic/inorganic chemistry and certain organic frameworks.

In organometallic and inorganic chemistry, an imido ligand is a nitrogen-containing fragment bonded to a metal,

In a broader sense, the term imido also appears in organic and inorganic frameworks to denote nitrogen-containing

Applications of imido-containing complexes include catalysis and selective transformations, where M=NR bonds enable various nitrogen-transfer reactions,

commonly
represented
as
M=NR
or
M=NR′.
The
imido
group
behaves
as
a
nitrene
equivalent,
bringing
a
high-valent
M–N
multiple
bond
into
the
complex.
Imido
ligands
can
be
terminal,
bound
to
a
single
metal
center,
or
bridging
two
metals.
They
are
well
known
in
early-transition-metal
and
actinide
chemistry
and
can
be
generated
by
reactions
such
as
dehydrogenation
of
amide
precursors
or
by
transfer
of
a
nitrene
equivalent
from
precursors
like
organoazides
to
a
metal
halide,
often
with
loss
of
nitrogen
gas.
fragments
derived
from
nitrene
chemistry
or
imide-related
structures,
where
nitrogen
bears
substituents
and
is
part
of
a
double-bonded
or
high-valent
fragment
within
a
molecular
framework.
The
terminology
is
distinguished
from
imide,
which
refers
to
two
carbonyl
groups
attached
to
nitrogen,
and
from
nitrene,
a
neutral
NR
fragment.
C–H
activations,
and
related
processes.