Peter Maitlis


Peter Michael Maitlis, FRS is a retired British organometallic chemist.

Education

Maitlis was born into a middle-class Jewish family in London, England. He was educated at Hendon School in north London 1944–50. He was awarded a Bachelor's degree in Science from the University of Birmingham, and a PhD and a DSc from the University of London.

Career

After completing his doctorate, Maitlis worked as an Assistant Lecturer at the University of London. He undertook postdoctoral study at Cornell University as a Fulbright Fellow and then as a research fellow at Harvard University under F. G. A. Stone.
While working and teaching at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, he rose from Assistant Professor to a full Professorship. Returning to the United Kingdom in 1972, Maitlis was a professor of chemistry at the University of Sheffield for 30 years until his appointment as an emeritus professor in 2002.
In 1971, he published two volumes on the organic chemistry of palladium which were "widely recognised as the most authoritative account of the organo-complexes of this metal".
Maitlis was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1984. The citation highlights his work on the platinum group metals palladium, rhodium and iridium.

Achievements in organometallic chemistry

The hexafluorophosphate ion is generally considered inert and hence a suitable counterion in organometallic synthesis. However, Maitlis' work has demonstrated a solvolysis reaction of the hexafluorophosphate ion. The tris rhodium complex 2 undergoes solvolysis when heated in acetone, forming a difluorophosphate-bridged complex PF6.
Hexamethyl Dewar benzene undergoes an unusual rearrangement reaction with hydrohalic acids to form a pentamethylcyclopentadiene derivative, and consequently can be used as a starting material for synthesising some pentamethylcyclopentadienyl organometallic compounds.
Image:Hexamethyl Dewar benzene reacting with rhodium chloride under acidic conditions.PNG|800px|frameless|center|Synthesis of the rhodium dimer 2 from hexamethyl Dewar benzene
Maitlis and colleagues demonstrated this synthesis and its applicability to the iridium analogue, Pentamethylcyclopentadienyl iridium dichloride dimer|2. His group also demonstrated a more convenient synthesis for the bright orange, air-stable diamagnetic iridium reagent using pentamethylcyclopentadiene.
Isocyanides can serves as ligands in co-ordination chemistry as a result of the lone electron pair on carbon, and are especially useful with metals in the 0, +1, and +2 oxidation states. In particular, Maitlis has demonstrated that tert-butyl isocyanide can stabilise metals in unusual oxidation states, such as palladium in the complex 2.

Metallomesogens

Metallomesogens are "metal complexes of organic ligands which exhibit liquid crystalline character combine the variety and range of metal-based coordination chemistry with the extraordinary physical properties exhibited by liquid crystals." They have been a research interest of Maitlis' group since the mid-1980s, and in fact Maitlis jointly directed the early investigations of these systems in the UK and actually coined the term metallomesogen.

Personal life

Maitlis is Jewish. He is the father of the journalist and newsreader Emily Maitlis.

Most cited publications

The following list shows all journal articles by Maitlis which have been cited more than 200 times according to Web of Science data. The number of citations indicated is current as at 4 February 2011: