RESUMEN
A new series of nonoxido vanadium(IV) compounds [VL2] (L = L(1)-L(3)) (1-3) have been synthesized using dithiocarbazate-based tridentate Schiff-base ligands H2L(1)-H2L(3), containing an appended phenol ring with a tert-butyl substitution at the 2-position. The compounds are characterized by X-ray diffraction analysis (1, 3), IR, UV-vis, EPR spectroscopy, and electrochemical methods. These are nonoxido V(IV) complexes that reveal a rare distorted trigonal prismatic arrangement around the "bare" vanadium centers. Concerning the ligand isomerism, the structure of 1 and 3 can be described as intermediate between mer and sym-fac isomers. DFT methods were used to predict the geometry, g and (51)V A tensors, electronic structure, and electronic absorption spectrum of compounds 1-3. Hyperfine coupling constants measured in the EPR spectra can be reproduced satisfactorily at the level of theory PBE0/VTZ, whereas the wavelength and intensity of the absorptions in the UV-vis spectra at the level CAM-B3LYP/gen, where "gen" is a general basis set obtained using 6-31+g(d) for S and 6-31g for all the other elements. The results suggest that the electronic structure of 1-3 can be described in terms of a mixing among V-dxy, V-dxz, and V-dyz orbitals in the singly occupied molecular orbital (SOMO), which causes a significant lowering of the absolute value of the (51)V hyperfine coupling constant along the x-axis. The cyclic voltammograms of these compounds in dichloroethane solution display three one-electron processes, two in the cathodic and one in the anodic potential range. Process A (E1/2 = +1.06 V) is due to the quasi-reversible V(IV/V) oxidation while process B at E1/2 = -0.085 V is due to the quasi-reversible V(IV/III) reduction, and the third one (process C) at a more negative potential E1/2 = -1.66 V is due to a ligand centered reduction, all potentials being measured vs Ag/AgCl reference.
RESUMEN
Heterobimetallic compounds [L'OV(V)(µ-O)M(III)L]n (n = 1, M = Mn, 1-5; n = 2, M = Fe, 6 and 7) containing a discrete unsupported V(V)-O-M(III) bridge have been synthesized through a targeted synthesis route. In the V-O-Mn-type complexes, the vanadium(V) centers have a square-pyramidal geometry, completed by a dithiocarbazate-based tridentate Schiff-base ligand (H2L'), while the manganese(III) centers have either a square-pyramidal (1 and 3) or an octahedral (2 and 5) geometry, made up of a Salen-type tetradentate ligand (H2L) as established by X-ray diffraction analysis. The V-O-Mn bridge angle in these compounds varies systematically from 155.3° to 128.1° in going from 1 to 5 while the corresponding dihedral angle between the basal planes around the metal centers changes from 86.82° to 20.92°, respectively. The V-O-Fe-type complexes (6 and 7) are tetranuclear, in which the two dinuclear V(µ-O)Fe units are connected together by apical iron(III)-aryl oxide interactions, forming a dimeric structure with a pair of Fe-O-Fe bridges. The X-ray data also confirm the VâO â M canonical form to contribute predominantly on the overall V-O-M bridge structure. The molecules in solution also retain their heterobinuclear composition, as established by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry and (51)V NMR spectroscopy. Electrochemically, these complexes are quite interesting; the manganese(III) complexes (1-5) display three successive reductions (processes I-III), each with a monoelectron stoichiometry. Process I is due to a Mn(III)/Mn(II) reduction (E1/2 ranges between -0.32 and -0.05 V), process II is a ligand-based reduction, and process III (E1/2 = â¼1.80 V) owes its origin to a V(V)O/V(IV)O reduction; all potentials are versus Ag/AgCl. The iron(III) compounds (6 and 7), on the other hand, show at least four irreversible processes, appearing at Epc = -0.20, -1.0, -1.58, and -1.68 V in compound 6 (processes IV-VII), together with a reversible process (process VIII) at E1/2 = -1.80 V (ΔEp = 80 mV). While the first two of these are due to Fe(III)/Fe(II) reductions at the two iron(III) centers of these tetranuclear cores, the reversible reduction at a more negative potential (ca. -1.80 V) is due to a V(V)O/V(IV)O-based electron transfer.
Asunto(s)
Hierro/química , Manganeso/química , Compuestos Organometálicos/química , Compuestos Organometálicos/síntesis química , Óxidos/química , Oxígeno/química , Vanadio/química , Estructura Molecular , Oxidación-ReducciónRESUMEN
A new family of trinuclear homo- and heterometal complexes with a triangular [V(V)O-MO-V(V)O] (M = V(IV), 1 and 2; Re(V), 3] all-oxido-metal core have been synthesized following a single-pot protocol using compartmental Schiff-base ligands, N,N'-bis(3-hydroxysalicylidene)-diiminoalkanes/arene (H4L(1)-H4L(3)). The upper compartment of these ligands with N2O2 donor combination (Salen-type) contains either a V(IV) or a Re(V) center, while the lower compartment with O4 donor set accommodates two V(V) centers, stabilized by a terminal and a couple of bridging methoxido ligands. The compounds have been characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction analyses, which reveal octahedral geometry for all three metal centers in 1-3. Compound 1 crystallizes in a monoclinic space group P2(1)/c, while both 2 and 3 have more symmetric structures with orthorhombic space group Pnma that renders the vanadium(V) centers in these compounds exactly identical. In DMF solution, compound 1 displays an 8-line EPR at room temperature with
RESUMEN
Heterobimetallic compounds [L(1)OV(V)âOâFe(metsalophen)(H(2)O)] (1) and [L(2)OV(V)âOâFe(metsalophen)(H(2)O)]CH(3)CN (2), where H(2)L(1) and H(2)L(2) are tridentate dithiocarbazate-based Schiff base ligands, containing a discrete V(V)-µ-O-Fe(III) angular core have been synthesized for the first time through a targeted synthesis route: confirmation in favor of such a heterobimetallic core structure has come from single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry.
RESUMEN
A new family of [2 × 2] tetranuclear 3d-4f heterometallic complexes have been synthesized. These are [Zn(2)Dy(2)L(2)(µ(3)-OH)(2)(µ(4)-OH)(dbm)(2)(MeOH)(2)](NO(3))·2H(2)O·MeOH (3), [Ni(2)Dy(2)L(2)(µ(3)-OH)(2)(µ(4)-OH)(dbm)(2)(MeOH)(2)](NO(3))·MeOH (4), [Ni(2)La(2)L(2)(µ(3)-OH)(2)(µ(4)-OH)(dbm)(2)(MeOH)(2)](ClO(4))·H(2)O·2MeOH (5), [Ni(2)Tb(2)L(2)(µ(3)-OH)(2)(µ(4)-OH)(dbm)(2) (MeOH)(2)](NO(3))·MeOH (6), and [Ni(2)Gd(2)L(2)(µ(3)-OH)(2)(µ(4)-OH)(dbm)(2)(MeOH)(2)](NO(3))·MeOH (7), [H(2)L = N,N'-dimethyl-N,N'-bis(2-hydroxy-3,5-dimethylbenzyl)ethylenediamine and Hdbm = dibenzoylmethane] obtained through a single-pot synthesis using [Zn(HL)(dbm)] (for 3)/[Ni(HL)(dbm)]·2CH(3)OH (for 4, 5, 6, and 7) as 3d-metal ion precursors. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis and electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectroscopy have been used to establish their identities. Compounds are isostructural, in which the metal ions are all connected together by a bridging hydroxido ligand in a rare µ(4)-mode. In complexes 3-7, the metal ions are antiferromagnetically coupled. Taking a cue from the results of 3 and 5, precise estimations have been made for the antiferromagnetic Ni···Ni (J(Ni) = -50 cm(-1)), Ni···Gd (J(NiGd) = -4.65 cm(-1)), and Gd···Gd (J(Gd) = -0.02 cm(-1)) exchange interactions in 7, involving the gadolinium(III) ions. The Zn(II)(2)Dy(III)(2) compound 3 has shown the tail of an out-of-phase signal in alternating current (AC) susceptibility measurement, indicative of slow relaxation of magnetization. Interestingly, the Ni(II)(2)Dy(III)(2) compound 4 in which both the participating metal ions possess large single ion anisotropy, has failed to show up any slow magnetic relaxation.
RESUMEN
An unprecedented single crystal-to-single crystal transformation occurs when a binuclear oxovanadium(V) compound [V(V)(2)O(2)(L)(2)] 1 involving 2,6-bis(hydroxymethyl)-p-cresol (H(3)L) as a bridging ligand is exposed simultaneously to white light and aerial oxygen to generate an oligomeric compound [V(IV)(2)O(2)(L*)(2)] 2 (H(2)L* is 3-hydroxymethyl-5-methylsalicylaldehyde). Each vanadium(V) center in 1 is reduced to vanadium(IV) in 2 at the expense of a two-electron alcohol-to-aldehyde oxidation in the coordinated ligand. The additional electron being released is possibly consumed by molecular oxygen to generate hydrogen peroxide.
RESUMEN
A family of trinuclear oximato complexes [(M(II)L)(3)(mu(3)-O)]ClO(4) (M = Ni, 1-3; Pd, 4 and 5) (HL = 2-alkylamino-3-oximobutane) involving a discrete [M(3)(mu(3)-O)](4+) core have been synthesized in moderate to high yields by a simple one-pot reaction. The products were characterized by ESI-mass and (1)H NMR spectroscopy as well as by single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis of representative compounds viz., 1, 2, and 4. The oximato oxygen atoms from the ligands and the central mu(3)-O atom connect the metal centers, forming an inverse metallacrown topology in these complexes. In the isostructural nickel compounds (1, 2), the metal centers are situated at the vertices of an equilateral triangle with its centroid position being occupied by the mu(3)-O atom; the Ni-O-Ni angles vary in the range 119.0(2)-120.2(2) degrees . In the palladium complex 4, the geometry of the Pd(3)O core is better described as a regular trigonal pyramid with the metal centers and the mu(3)-O atom occupying the apexes; the Pd-O-Pd angles are close to 109 degrees . The coordination square planes around the individual palladium centers bend appreciably from each other (dihedral angles vary in the range 28.62-34.53 degrees ), providing more of a bowl shape compared to the overall metallacrown topology that remains virtually planar in the nickel complexes. The mu(3)-oxygen atom in 4 is displaced by 0.687 A from the center of the triangular plane with corners occupied by the Pd(II) ions. The protons of the metallacrown peripheral rings in 4 and 5 are more deshielded compared to their nickel(II) counterparts, as revealed from their (1)H NMR spectra in dichloromethane-d(2) solution.
RESUMEN
A trinuclear oximato complex, [(NiHL(1))(3)(µ(3)-O)]ClO(4) (1), with inverse metallacrown 9-MC-3 topology has been synthesized using a Schiff-base ligand (H(2)L(1)) formed by condensation of ethanolamine (Hea) and diacetylmonoxime (Hdamo). The diamagnetic compound has been characterized by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry as well as by single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. In the solid state, the alcoholic OH group in this molecule stays away from coordination. Surprisingly in a similar chemical reaction, when intact Hea and Hdamo have been used as ligands instead of their Schiff-base forms, the product obtained is a 12-MC-4-type metallacrown, (Et(3)NH)[Ni(4)(damo)(4)(Hea)(2)(ea)(2)](ClO(4))(3) (2), with a larger cavity size needed to accommodate a pair of hydrogen-bonded (O-H···O)(-) anions. Unlike in 1, the alcoholic OH groups in 2 take part in metal coordination. Compound 2 on being refluxed with lithium hydroxide in methanol is converted to 1 in almost quantitative yield. This appears to be a novel reaction type, leading to contraction of a metallacrown ring size. A family of 12-MC-4 Ni(4) metallacrowns in inverse topology, viz., [Ni(4)(damo)(4)(H(2)dea)(2)(Hdea)(2)](ClO(4))(2)·2H(2)O (3), [Ni(4)(dpko)(4)(Hea)(2)(ea)(2)](ClO(4))(2)·4H(2)O (4), and [Ni(4)(mpko)(4)(Hmea)(2)(mea)(2)](ClO(4))(2) (5), have been synthesized following a methodology similar to that adopted for 2, using different combinations of free oximes [viz., dipyridylketonoxime (Hdpko) and methylpyridylketonoxime (Hmpko)] and amino alcohols [viz., diethanolamine (H(2)dea), and N-methylethanolamine (Hmea)]. Crystal and molecular structures of 3-5 have been reported, each involving either a quasi (in 3) or a perfect (in 4 and 5) square plane (S(4) symmetry) with four octahedral Ni centers occupying the corners, and serve as a backbone of puckered metallacrown rings that accommodate a pair of hydrogen-bonded (O-H···O)(-) anions. Antiferromagnetic interactions within the [Ni(4)] core [J/k(B) ≈ -20 to -27 K based on the following spin Hamiltonian: H = -2J(S(1)·S(2) + S(2)·S(3) + S(3)·S(4) + S(4)·S(1))] lead to an S(T) = 0 ground state for these complexes.
Asunto(s)
Níquel/química , Compuestos Organometálicos/química , Oxígeno/química , Aniones/química , Cristalografía por Rayos X , Modelos Moleculares , Estructura Molecular , Compuestos Organometálicos/síntesis química , Tamaño de la PartículaRESUMEN
Correction for 'Mixed azido/phenoxido bridged trinuclear Cu(ii) complexes of Mannich bases: Synthesis, structures, magnetic properties and catalytic oxidase activities' by A. Ghosh et al., Dalton Trans., 2018, 47, 9385-9399.
RESUMEN
In basic media, the coordinated semiquinone radical in the spin-coupled [(bipy)ClV(IV)O(TCSQ)] 1 (HTCSQ = tetrachlorosemiquinone) undergoes nucleophilic ipso substitution (OH- for Cl-) to generate the chloranilate anion (CA(2-)) that bridges the vanadium(IV) centers, forming a binuclear compound [(bipy)ClV(IV)O(CA)OV(IV)Cl(bipy)] 2.
Asunto(s)
Benzoquinonas/química , Cloro/química , Reactivos de Enlaces Cruzados/química , Hidroquinonas/química , Vanadio/química , Aniones/química , Ligandos , Modelos Moleculares , Estructura MolecularRESUMEN
Five neutral bis(µ-phenoxido)dicopper(II) complexes, [Cu2(LMe,Me,Me)2] (1), [Cu2(LMe,Me,Et)2]·CH2Cl2 (2), [Cu2(L i-Pr,i-Pr,i-Pr)2]·2H2O (3), [Cu2(L t-Bu,Me,i-Pr)2] (4), and [Cu2(L t-Bu,t-Bu,i-Pr)2]·H2O (5) have been synthesized and characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction analyses, magnetic studies, and density functional theory (DFT) calculations, in which the ligands [H2LMe,Me,Me = N,N-bis(2-hydroxy-3,5-dimethylbenzyl)-N',N'-dimethylethylene-1,2-diamine, H2LMe,Me,Et = N,N-bis(2-hydroxy-3,5-dimethylbenzyl)-N',N'-dimethylethylene-1,2-diamine, H2L i-Pr,i-Pr,i-Pr = N,N-bis(2-hydroxy-3,5-diisopropylbenzyl)-N',N'-diisopropylethylene-1,2-diamine, H2L t-Bu,Me,i-Pr = N,N-bis(2-hydroxy-3-tert-butyl-5-methylbenzyl)-N',N'-diisopropylethylene-1,2-diamine, and H2L t-Bu,t-Bu,i-Pr = N,N-bis(2-hydroxy-3,5-di-tert-butylbenzyl)-N',N'-diisopropylethylene-1,2-diamine] contain the same [O,N,N,O]-donor atoms combination but differ in substituents at phenol rings and at an amino nitrogen atom. The effect of these remote substituents on the nature of exchange coupling interactions (ferromagnetic vs antiferromagnetic) between the copper(II) ions has been investigated. The average Cu-O-Cu angle, Cu-O-Cu-O torsion angle, and Cu···Cu separation in 1-5 are varied systematically by these remote ligand substituents in the range 98.6-83.3°, 26.0-46.5°, and 2.982-2.633 Å, respectively. As a result, the intramolecular spin-spin coupling in these complexes are changing gradually from a strong antiferromagnetic (J = -395 cm-1, where H = -JS 1 S 2) to a moderate ferromagnetic (J = +53.2 cm-1) regime. The crossover angle at which the magnetic interaction changes from antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic (J = 0) is determined to be ca. 87° for this series of dicopper(II) complexes. DFT calculations support the experimentally determined crossover angle and disclose various magneto-structural correlations in the series 1-5.
RESUMEN
Heterobimetallic complexes of a vanadium(V) and rhenium(VII) combination connected by a mu-oxido bridge [LVO(mu-O)ReO 3].H 2O [H 2L = N, N'-ethylene bis(salicylideneimine) (H 2salen) and its methoxy derivative] ( 1, 2) are reported. The compounds have been prepared by a single-pot synthesis in which the precursor [V (IV)OL] complexes are allowed to be oxidized aerially in the presence of added perrhenate. The oxidized [V (V)OL] (+) species accommodate the ReO 4 (-) anion in their vacant coordination site, trans to the terminal oxido group, providing the complexes 1 and 2. The later generates a binuclear oxovanadium(V) compound [H 2en][(TBC)VO(mu-TBC) 2OV(TBC)].5H 2O ( 3) when treated with tetrabromocatechol. Single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis and (1)H NMR spectroscopy have been used to establish their identities. In compound 2, the Re(1)-O(11)-V(1) bridge angle is barely linear [170.2(3) degrees ] with a Re...V separation of 3.9647(9) A. The redox behavior of 1 and 2 are quite interesting, each undergoing two reductions both in the positive potential range at E 1/2 = 0.59 (process I) and E 1/2 = 0.16 V (process II) versus Ag/AgCl reference (corresponding potentials are 0.59 and 0.18 V for 2). Process I has a single-electron stoichiometry involving the [VO(salen)] part of the complexes as established by combined coulometry-Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) experiments which provide an eight-line isotropic EPR pattern at room temperature (
RESUMEN
Three similar Mannich base ligands viz. N,N-bis(3,5-dimethyl-2-hydroxybenzyl)-N',N'-dimethyl-1,3-diaminopropane (H2L1), N,N-bis(3,5-dimethyl-2-hydroxybenzyl)-N',N'-dimethyl-1,2-diaminoethane (H2L2) and N,N-bis(3,5-dimethyl-2-hydroxybenzyl)-N',N'-diethyl-1,2-diaminoethane (H2L3) upon reaction with Cu(CH3COO)2·H2O produced dinuclear complexes [Cu2L21-3]. The reaction of each of these isolated dimeric species with Cu(ClO4)2·6H2O and NaN3 resulted in three new trinuclear complexes, [(CuL1)2(µ1,1-N3)2Cu(H2O)]·CH3OH (1), [(CuL2)2(µ1,1-N3)2Cu(H2O)]·CH3OH (2) and [(CuL3)2(µ1,1-N3)2Cu(H2O)]·2CH3OH (3), respectively. The complexes (1-3) have been characterized by elemental analysis and single crystal X-ray diffraction. In all three complexes, the central Cu(ii) ion is coordinated by two terminal [CuL] units through a phenoxido and an azido bridge. These are the first trinuclear Cu(ii) complexes of this type of Mannich base ligands. Magnetic susceptibility measurements showed intramolecular antiferromagnetic interactions with J = -64.42, -9.60 and -4.54 cm-1 for 1, 2 and 3, respectively. All three complexes exhibited catecholase-like and phenoxazinone synthase-like activities towards the aerobic oxidation of 3,5-di-tert-butylcatechol and o-aminophenol, respectively. The turnover numbers (kcat) for the aerobic oxidation of 3,5-di-tert-butylcatechol are 568.8, 542.1 and 500.4 h-1 and those of o-aminophenol are 125.83, 118.9 and 114.7 h-1 for complexes 1-3, respectively. The X-band EPR spectroscopy and estimation of the produced hydrogen peroxide indicated that the aerobic oxidation of 3,5-di-tert-butylcatechol proceeded through the formation of a semiquinonate radical. The mechanism of phenoxazinone synthase-like activities is also proposed for trinuclear Cu(ii) catalysts with the help of mass spectral analysis.