RESUMO
A novel synthetic approach has been employed to synthesize a series of new nitronyl nitroxides: 2-(1-propyl-1H-imidazol-5-yl)- (Ln-Pr ), 2-(1-isopropyl-1H-imidazol-5-yl)- (Li-Pr ) and 2-(1-butyl-1H-imidazol-5-yl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethyl-4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazole-3-oxide-1-oxyl (Ln-Bu ). The reaction of Cu(hfac)2 with LR in a 1 : 2 ratio yields mononuclear heterospin complexes [Cu(hfac)2 (LR )2 ] (LR =Ln-Pr , Li-Pr , Ln-Bu ), which have a similar crystal structure to the "jumping" crystals [Cu(hfac)2 (LMe )2 ] that exhibit chemomechanical activity. It was shown that an increase in the alkyl substituent R leads to changes in the crystal packing of the molecules and the absence of chemomechanical activity. Furthermore, it was found that two polymorph modifications of the heterospin complex [Cu(hfac)2 (Ln-Pr )2 ] can be obtained, and magnetic properties of [Cu(hfac)2 (Ln-Pr )2 ] strongly depend on the angle between the planes of the paramagnetic fragment Oâ¢-N-C=NâO and the imidazole ring in Ln-Pr .
RESUMO
A series of six-coordinate [Cu(L)L1][BF4]2 (L1 = 2,6-bis{1-oxyl-4,4,5,5-tetramethyl-4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazol-2-yl}pyridine) complexes are reported. Ferromagnetic coupling between the Cu and L1 ligand spins is enhanced by an L coligand with distal methyl substituents, which is attributed to a sterically induced suppression of its Jahn-Teller distortion.
RESUMO
We report a multifrequency nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) study of heterospin complexes [Eu(SQ)3Ln], where SQ is 3,6-di(tert-butyl)-1,2-semiquinone, L is tetrahydrofuran (THF), pyridine (Py), or 2,2'-dipyridyl (Dipy), and n is the number of diamagnetic ligands. Multifrequency NMR experiments allowed us to determine the effective paramagnetic shifts of the ligands (L = THF or Py) and the chemical equilibrium constant for [Eu(SQ)3(THF)2]. In addition, we have found a strong magnetic field effect on the NMR line broadening, giving rise to very broad NMR lines at high magnetic fields. We attribute this effect to broadening under fast exchange conditions when the NMR spectrum represents a homogeneously broadened line with a width proportional to the square of the NMR frequency difference of the free and bound forms of L. Consequently, the line width strongly increases with the magnetic field. This broadening effect allows one to determine relevant kinetic parameters, i.e., the effective exchange time. The strong broadening effect allows one to exploit the [Eu(SQ)3(THF)2] complex as an efficient shift reagent, which not only shifts unwanted NMR signals but also broadens them, notably, in high-field NMR experiments. We have also found that [Eu(SQ)3Dipy] is a thermodynamically stable complex; hence, one can study [Eu(SQ)3Dipy] solutions without special precautions. We report an X-ray structure of the [Eu(SQ)3Dipy]·C6D6 crystals that have been grown directly in an NMR tube. This shows that multifrequency NMR investigations of heterospin compound solutions not only provide thermodynamic and kinetic data for heterospin species but also can be useful for the rational design of stable heterospin complexes and optimization of synthetic approaches.
RESUMO
Spontaneous solvent-controlled solid-state transformations were observed for a series of polymeric chain solvates [Cu(hfac)2LPr]·0.5Solv (Solv = (CH3)2CO, THF, CH2Cl2, CH2Br2, CHCl3) with 2-(1-propyl-1H-imidazol-5-yl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethyl-4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazole-3-oxide-1-oxyl (LPr) under ambient conditions. The conversion of powdered polymeric chain [Cu(hfac)2LPr]·0.5THF and [Cu(hfac)2LPr]·0.5(CH3)2CO complexes, accompanied by the loss of solvent molecules, occurs completely to binuclear [Cu(hfac)2LPr]2 within a day. On the other hand, in the case of [Cu(hfac)2LPr]·0.5Solv (Solv = CH2Cl2, CH2Br2, CHCl3), the partial transformation into a desolvated 1D polymer [Cu(hfac)2LPr] or its mixture with [Cu(hfac)2LPr]2 takes much longer time. The magnetic behavior of the isostructural solvates is highly sensitive to the included solvent molecules. The complexes with THF, CH2Cl2, CH2Br2, and CHCl3 undergo a transition to a magnetically ordered state below 4 K, a phenomenon reported for the first time for the polymeric chain Cu(II) complexes with a "head-to-tail" motif. [Cu(hfac)2LPr]·0.5THF and [Cu(hfac)2LPr]·0.5(CH3)2CO undergo a spin transition at 190 K, which is induced by the transformation of the Cu atom environment. In the case of the THF solvate, the increase in the distances between the Cu and oxygen atoms leads to enhanced ferromagnetic exchange interactions, while in the acetone solvate, the nitroxide coordination type changes from axial to equatorial at certain coordination sites, resulting in the emergence of strong antiferromagnetic exchange.
RESUMO
The reaction of copper(II) hexafluoroacetylacetonate [Cu(hfac)2] with the stable nitronyl nitroxide 2-(1-ethyl-3-methyl-1H-pyrazol-4-yl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethyl-4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazole-3-oxide-1-oxyl (L(a)) resulted in a paired heterospin complex [[Cu(hfac)2]3(µ-O,N-L(a))2][Cu(hfac)2(O-L(a))2]. The crystals of the compound were found to be capable of a reversible single-crystal-to-single-crystal (SC-SC) transformation initiated by the variation of temperature. At room temperature, the molecular structure of [[Cu(hfac)2]3(µ-O,N-L(a))2][Cu(hfac)2(O-L(a))2] is formed by the alternating fragments of the pair complex. Cooling the crystals of the complex below 225 K caused considerable mutual displacements of adjacent molecules, which ended in a transformation of the molecular structure into a polymer chain structure. A reversible topotactic polymerization-depolymerization coordination reaction actually takes place in the solid during repeated cooling-heating cycles: [[Cu(hfac)2]3(µ-O,N-L(a))2][Cu(hfac)2(O-L(a))2] â Cu(hfac)2(µ-O,N-L(a))]∞. Polymerization during cooling is the result of the anomalously great shortening of intermolecular distances (from 4.403 Å at 295 K to 2.460 Å at 150 K; Δd = 1.943 Å) between the terminal Cu atoms of the trinuclear fragments {[[Cu(hfac)2]3(µ-O,N-L(a))2]} and the noncoordinated N atoms of the pyrazole rings of the mononuclear {[Cu(hfac)2(O-L(a))2]} fragments. When the low-temperature phase was heated above 270 K, the polymer chain structure was destroyed and the compound was again converted to the pair molecular complex. The specifics of the given SC-SC transformation lies in the fact that the process is accompanied by a magnetic anomaly, because the intracrystalline displacements of molecules lead to a considerable change in the mutual orientation of the paramagnetic centers, which, in turn, causes modulation of the exchange interaction between the odd electrons of the Cu(2+) ion and nitroxide. On the temperature curve of χT, this shows itself as a hysteresis loop. The nontrivial character of the recorded spin transition during the cooling of the sample below 225 K lies in the fact that the magnetic moment abruptly increased. In contrast, heating the sample above 270 K led to a drastic decrease in χT. This behavior of χT is caused by a stepwise change in the character of the exchange interaction in the {>N-(â¢)O-Cu(2+)-O(â¢)-N<} fragments. The lengthening of distances between the paramagnetic centers on cooling below 225 K led to a transition from antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic exchange and, vice versa, the shortening of distances between the paramagnetic centers during the heating of the heterospin polymer above 270 K led to a transition from ferromagnetic exchange to antiferromagnetic exchange.
RESUMO
Heterospin complexes [Cu(SQ)2Py].C7H8, Cu(SQ)2DABCO, and [Cu(SQ)2NIT-mPy].C6H6, where Cu(SQ)2 is bis(3,6-di-tert-butyl-o-benzosemiquinonato)copper(II), DABCO is 1,4-diazabicyclo(2,2,2)octane, and NIT-mPy is the nitronyl nitroxide 2-(pyridin-3-yl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethyl-4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazole-3-oxide-1-oxyl, have been synthesized. The molecules of these complexes have a specific combination of the intramolecular ferro- and antiferromagnetic exchange interactions between the odd electrons of Cu(II) and SQ ligands, characterized by large exchange coupling parameters |J| approximately 100-300 cm(-1). X-ray and magnetochemical studies of a series of mixed-ligand compounds revealed that an extra ligand (Py, NIT-mPy, or DABCO) coordinated to the metal atom produces a dramatic effect on the magnetic properties of the complex, changing the multiplicity of the ground state. Quantum chemical analysis of magnetostructural correlations showed that the energy of the antiferromagnetic exchange interaction between the odd electrons of the SQ ligands in the Cu(SQ)2 bischelate is extremely sensitive to both the nature of the extra ligand and structural distortions of the coordination unit, arising from extra ligand coordination.