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π-Extended acenaphtho[1,2-d][1,2,3]triazoles, the unsubstituted Anta-H and its di-tert-butyl derivative Dibanta-H, as well as 5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-1H-naphtho[2,3-d][1,2,3]triazole Cybta-H were obtained in concise syntheses. In the solid state, Dibanta-H forms an unprecedented hydrogen-bonded cyclic tetrad, stabilized by dispersion interactions of the bulky tBu substituents, whereas a cyclic triad was found in the crystal structure of Anta-H. These cyclic assemblies form infinite slipped stacks in the crystals. Evidence for analogous hydrogen-bonded self-assembly in solution was provided by low-temperature NMR spectroscopy and computational analyses. Kuratowski-type pentanuclear complexes [Zn5 Cl4 (Dibanta)6 ] and [Zn5 Cl4 (Cybta)6 ] were prepared from the respective triazoles. In the Dibanta complexes, the π-aromatic surfaces of the ligands extend from the edges of the tetrahedral Zn5 core, yielding an enlarged structure with significant internal molecular free volume and red-shifted fluorescence.
Asunto(s)
Triazoles , Ligandos , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética , Modelos MolecularesRESUMEN
Case studies of 1T-TiSe2 and YBa2Cu3O7-δ have demonstrated that X-ray diffraction (XRD) studies can be used to trace even subtle structural phase transitions which are inherently connected with the onset of superconductivity in these benchmark systems. However, the utility of XRD in the investigation of superconductors like MgB2 lacking an additional symmetry-breaking structural phase transition is not immediately evident. Nevertheless, high-resolution powder XRD experiments on MgB2 in combination with maximum entropy method analyses hinted at differences between the electron density distributions at room temperature and 15 K, that is, below the Tc of approx. 39 K. The high-resolution single-crystal XRD experiments in combination with multipolar refinements presented here can reproduce these results but show that the observed temperature-dependent density changes are almost entirely due to a decrease of atomic displacement parameters as a natural consequence of a reduced thermal vibration amplitude with decreasing temperature. Our investigations also shed new light on the presence or absence of magnesium vacancies in MgB2 samplesâa defect type claimed to control the superconducting properties of the compound. We propose that previous reports on the tendency of MgB2 to form non-stoichiometric Mg1-xB2 phases (1 - x â¼ 0.95) during high-temperature (HT) synthesis might result from the interpretation of XRD data of insufficient resolution and/or usage of inflexible refinement models. Indeed, advanced refinements based on an Extended Hansen-Coppens multipolar model and high-resolution X-ray data, which consider explicitly the contraction of core and valence shells of the magnesium cations, do not provide any significant evidence for the formation of non-stoichiometric Mg1-xB2 phases during HT synthesis.
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Similar to classical asphericity shifts, aspherical deformations of the electron density in the atomic core region can result in core asphericity shifts in refinements using a Hansen-Coppens multipolar model (HCM), especially when highly precise experimental datasets with resolutions far beyond sin(θ)/λ ≤ 1.0 Å-1 are employed. These shifts are about two orders of magnitude smaller than their counterparts caused by valence shell deformations, and their underlying deformations are mainly of dipolar character for 1st row atoms. Here, we analyze the resolution dependence of core asphericity shifts in α-boron. Based on theoretical structure factors, an appropriate Extended HCM (EHCM) is developed, which is tested against experimental high-resolution (sin(θ)/λ ≤ 1.6 Å-1) single-crystal diffraction data. Bond length deviations due to core asphericity shifts of α-boron in the order of 4-6·10-4 Å are small but significant at this resolution and can be effectively compensated by an EHCM, although the correlation of the additional model parameters with positional parameters prevented a free refinement of all core model parameters. For high quality, high resolution data, a proper treatment with an EHCM or other equivalent methods is therefore highly recommended.
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The chemical or physical control parameters for the onset of superconductivity in MB2 C2 hetero-graphene materials are unclear. This is mainly due to the almost ubiquitous positional B/C disorder, rendering the description of real structures of borocarbides into one of the most challenging problems in materials science. We will show that high-resolution X-ray diffraction data provides all the essential information to decode even complex coloring problems due to B/C disorder. Electron density studies and subsequent analyses of the fine structure of the Laplacian of the electron density resolves the local electronic structure of ScB2 C2 at sub-atomic resolution and allows for an unequivocal identification of all atoms involved in the coloring scenario. This information could finally be used to identify the electron deficient character of the B/C layers in ScB2 C2 and to synthesize the first bimetallic hetero-metallocene with lithium and scandium atoms embedded in the pentagonal and heptagonal voids, respectively.
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We outline in this combined experimental and theoretical NMR study that sign and magnitude of J(Si,H) coupling constants provide reliable indicators to evaluate the extent of the oxidative addition of Si-H bonds in hydrosilane complexes. In combination with experimental electron density studies and MO analyses a simple structure-property relationship emerges: positive J(Si,H) coupling constants are observed in cases where M â L π-back-donation (M = transition metal; L = hydrosilane ligand) dominates. The corresponding complexes are located close to the terminus of the respective oxidative addition trajectory. In contrast negative J(Si,H) values signal the predominance of significant covalent Si-H interactions and the according complexes reside at an earlier stage of the oxidative addition reaction pathway. Hence, in nonclassical hydrosilane complexes such as Cp2Ti(PMe3)(HSiMe3-nCln) (with n = 1-3) the sign of J(Si,H) changes from minus to plus with increasing number of chloro substituents n and maps the rising degree of oxidative addition. Accordingly, the sign and magnitude of J(Si,H) coupling constants can be employed to identify and characterize nonclassical hydrosilane species also in solution. These NMR studies might therefore help to reveal the salient control parameters of the Si-H bond activation process in transition-metal hydrosilane complexes which represent key intermediates for numerous metal-catalyzed Si-H bond activation processes. Furthermore, experimental high-resolution and high-pressure X-ray diffraction studies were undertaken to explore the close relationship between the topology of the electron density displayed by the η2(Si-H)M units and their respective J(Si,H) couplings.
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In this communication, a procedure is presented which allows for the determination of the scalar-relativistic contraction of individual electronic shells of transition metal atoms from X-ray structure factor data. The procedure is verified and benchmarked employing theoretical and experimental F(hkl) data, revealing an overall good agreement between the experimentally determined results and the theoretical reference values. From the experimental data, the relativistic contraction of the n = 2 shell of a cerium atom is, for example, determined as 0.097 pm, compared to a theoretical reference value of 0.116 pm. It is further demonstrated that the reproducibility of the results is excellent when comparing different experimental data sets. Finally, the dependency of the according results on the data resolution of the structure factor data is investigated.
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We will outline that the sign and magnitude of J(Si,H) coupling constants provide a highly sensitive tool to measure the extent of Si-H bond activation in nonclassical silane complexes. Up to now, this structure-property relationship was obscured by erroneous J(Si,H) sign determinations in the literature. These new findings also help to identify the salient control parameters of the Si-H bond activation process in nonclassical silane complexes.
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Square-planar d(8)-ML4 complexes might display subtle but noticeable local Lewis acidic sites in axial direction in the valence shell of the metal atom. These sites of local charge depletion provide the electronic prerequisites to establish weakly attractive 3c-2e Mâ â â H-C agostic interactions, in contrast to earlier assumptions. Furthermore, we show that the use of the sign of the (1)Hâ NMR shifts as major criterion to classify Mâ â â H-C interactions as attractive (agostic) or repulsive (anagostic) can be dubious. We therefore suggest a new characterization method to probe the response of these Mâ â â H-C interactions under pressure by combined high pressure IR and diffraction studies.
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The charge scaling effect in ionic liquids was explored on the basis of experimental and theoretical chargedensity analyses of [C1MIM][C1SO4] employing the quantum theory of atoms in molecules (QTAIM) approach. Integrated QTAIM charges of the experimental (calculated) charge density of the cation and anion resulted in non-integer values of ±0.90 (±0.87) e. Efficient charge transfer along the bond paths of the hydrogen bonds between the imidazolium ring and the anion was considered as the origin of these reduced charges. In addition, a detailed QTAIM analysis of the bonding situation in the [C1SO4]- anion revealed the presence of negative πOâσ*S-O hyperconjugation.
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The nature of the chemical bonds in CaSi, a textbook example of a Zintl phase, was investigated for the first time by means of a combined experimental and theoretical charge density analysis to test the validity of the Zintl-Klemm concept. The presence of covalent Si-Si interactions, which were shown by QTAIM analysis, supports this fundamental bonding concept. However, the use of an experimental charge density study and theoretical band structure analyses give clear evidence that the cation-anion interaction cannot be described as purely ionic, but also has partially covalent character. Integrated QTAIM atomic charges of the atoms contradict the original Zintl-Klemm concept and deliver a possible explanation for the unexpected metallic behavior of CaSi.
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Accurate X-ray diffraction experiments allow for a reconstruction of the electron density distribution of solids and molecules in a crystal. The basis for the reconstruction of the electron density is in many cases a multipolar expansion of the X-ray scattering factors in terms of spherical harmonics, a so-called multipolar model. This commonly used ansatz splits the total electron density of each pseudoatom in the crystal into (i) a spherical core, (ii) a spherical valence, and (iii) a nonspherical valence contribution. Previous studies, for example, on diamond and α-silicon have already shown that this approximation is no longer valid when ultrahigh-resolution diffraction data is taken into account. We report here the results of an analysis of the calculated electron density distribution in the d(0) transition metal compounds [TMCH3](2+) (TM = Sc, Y, and La) at subatomic resolution. By a detailed molecular orbital analysis, it is demonstrated that due to the radial nodal structure of the 3d, 4d, and 5d orbitals involved in the TM-C bond formation a significant polarization of the electron density in the inner electronic shells of the TM atoms is observed. We further show that these polarizations have to be taken into account by an extended multipolar model in order to recover accurate electron density distributions from high-resolution structure factors calculated for the title compounds.
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High-pressure (HP) X-ray diffraction experiments at low temperature (LT) require dedicated instruments as well as non-standard sample environments and measuring strategies. This is especially true when helium cryogenic temperatures below 80â K are targeted. Furthermore, only experiments on single-crystalline samples provide the prerequisites to study subtle structural changes in the p-T phase diagram under extreme LT and HP conditions in greater detail. Due to special hardware requirements, such measurements are usually in the realm of synchrotron beamlines. This contribution describes the design of an LT/HP diffractometer (HTD2) to perform single-crystal X-ray diffraction experiments using a laboratory source in the temperature range 400 > T > 2â K while applying pressures of up to 20â GPa.
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The vibrational response of the activated C-D bond in the chloroform complex [Pt(C6H5)2(btz-N,N')·CDCl3, where btz = 2,2'-bi-5,6-dihydro-4H-1,3-thiazine] is studied by linear and nonlinear two-dimensional infrared (2D-IR) spectroscopy. The change of the C-D stretching vibration of metal-coordinated CDCl3 relative to the free solvent molecule serves as a measure of the non-classical Pt···D-C interaction strength. The stretching absorption band of the activated C-D bond displays a red shift of 119 cm-1 relative to uncoordinated CDCl3, a strong broadening, and an 8-fold enhancement of spectrally integrated absorption. The infrared (IR) absorption and 2D-IR line shapes are governed by spectral diffusion on 200 fs and 2 ps time scales, induced by the fluctuating solvent CDCl3. The enhanced vibrational absorption and coupling to solvent forces are assigned to the enhanced electric polarizability of the activated C-D bond. Density functional theory calculations show a significant increase of C-D bond polarizability of CDCl3 upon coordination to the 16 valence electron Pt(II) complex.
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The reaction of potassium 2,5-bis[N-(2,6-diisopropylphenyl)iminomethyl]pyrrolyl [(dip(2)-pyr)K] with the borohydrides of the larger rare-earth metals, [Ln(BH(4))(3)(thf)(3)] (Ln=La, Nd), afforded the expected products [Ln(BH(4))(2)(dip(2)-pyr)(thf)(2)]. As usual, the trisborohydrides reacted like pseudohalide compounds forming KBH(4) as a by-product. To compare the reactivity with the analogous halides, the dimeric neodymium complex [NdCl(2)(dip(2)-pyr)(thf)](2) was prepared by reaction of [(dip(2)-pyr)K] with anhydrous NdCl(3). Reaction of [(dip(2)-pyr)K] with the borohydrides of the smaller rare-earth metals, [Sc(BH(4))(3)(thf)(2)] and [Lu(BH(4))(3)(thf)(3)], resulted in a redox reaction of the BH(4) (-) group with one of the Schiff base functions of the ligand. In the resulting products, [Ln(BH(4)){(dip)(dip-BH(3))-pyr}(thf)(2)] (Ln=Sc, Lu), a dinegatively charged ligand with a new amido function, a Schiff base, and the pyrrolyl function is bound to the metal atom. The by-product of the reaction of the BH(4) (-) anion with the Schiff base function (a BH(3) molecule) is trapped in a unique reaction mode in the coordination sphere of the metal complex. The BH(3) molecule coordinates in an eta(2) fashion to the metal atom. The rare-earth-metal atoms are surrounded by the eta(2)-coordinated BH(3) molecule, the eta(3)-coordinated BH(4) (-) anion, two THF molecules, and the nitrogen atoms from the Schiff base and the pyrrolyl function. All new compounds were characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Low-temperature X-ray diffraction data at 6 K were collected to locate the hydrogen atoms of [Lu(BH(4)){(dip)(dip-BH(3))-pyr}(thf)(2)]. The (DIP(2)-pyr)(-) borohydride and chloride complexes of neodymium, [Nd(BH(4))(2)(dip(2)-pyr)(thf)(2)] and [NdCl(2)(dip(2)-pyr)(thf)](2), were also used as Ziegler-Natta catalysts for the polymerization of 1,3-butadiene to yield poly(cis-1,4-butadiene). Very high activities and good cis selectivities were observed by using each of these complexes as a catalyst in the presence of various cocatalyst mixtures.
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Sc(3)RuC(4) and Sc(3)OsC(4) were synthesized by arc-melting and subsequent annealing. At room temperature, they crystallize with the Sc(3)CoC(4) structure, space group Immm. At 223 and 255 K, Sc(3)RuC(4) and Sc(3)OsC(4), respectively, show a monoclinic distortion caused by a pair-wise displacement of the one-dimensional [Ru(C(2))(2)](delta-) and [Os(C(2))(2)](delta-) polyanions, which are embedded in a scandium matrix. Superstructure formation leads to shorter Ru-Ru and Os-Os distances of 316 pm between adjacent [Ru(C(2))(2)](delta-) and [Os(C(2))(2)](delta-) polyanions. Each ruthenium (osmium) atom is covalently bonded to four C(2) pairs with Ru-C (Os-C) distances of 220-222 pm. A comparison of the C-C bond distances at room temperature in Sc(3)TC(4) with T representing a group 8 transition metal (Fe, Ru, Os) reveals a minimum in the case of the 4d metal Ru: 144.98(11) pm (Fe), 142.8(7) pm (Ru), and 144.6(4) pm (Os). Analysis of the local electronic structure of the [T(C(2))(2)] moieties hints at a complex interplay between chemical bonding and relativistic effects, which is responsible for the V-shaped pattern of the C-C bond distances (long, short, and long for T = Fe, Ru, and Os, respectively). Relativistic effects lead to a strengthening of covalent T-C bonding. This is shown on the basis of periodic DFT calculations by a significant increase of the charge density at the T-C bond critical points (0.55 < 0.57 < 0.64 eA(-3)) down the row of group 8 elements. These structural characteristics and topological features do not change in the corresponding low-temperature phases of Sc(3)RuC(4) and Sc(3)OsC(4). However, topological analyses of theoretical charge density distributions reveal distinct changes of the valence shell charge concentrations at the transition metal centers due to the monoclinic distortions. Presumably, the local electronic situation at the transition metals reflects the origin and extent of these monoclinic distortions.
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The nature of metal silane sigma-bond interaction has been investigated in several key systems by a range of experimental and computational techniques. The structure of [Cp'Mn(CO)(2)(eta(2)-HSiHPh(2))] 1 has been determined by single crystal neutron diffraction, and the geometry at the Si atom is shown to approximate a trigonal bipyramid; salient bond distances and angles are Mn-H(1) 1.575(14), Si-H(1) 1.806(14), Si-H(2) 1.501(13) A, and H(1)-Si-H(2) 148.5(8) degrees. This complex is similar to [Cp'Mn(CO)(2)(eta(2)-HSiFPh(2))] 2, whose structure and bonding characteristics have recently been determined by charge density studies based on high-resolution X-ray and neutron diffraction data. The geometry at the Si atom in these sigma-bond complexes is compared with that in other systems containing hypercoordinate silicon. The Mn-H distances for 1 and 2 in solution have been estimated using NMR T(1) relaxation measurements, giving a value of 1.56(3) A in each case, in excellent agreement with the distances deduced from neutron diffraction. Density functional theory calculations have been employed to explore the bonding in the Mn-H-Si unit in 1 and 2 and in the related system [Cp'Mn(CO)(2)(eta(2)-HSiCl(3))] 3. These studies support the idea that the oxidative addition of a silane ligand to a transition metal center may be described as an asymmetric process in which the Mn-H bond is formed at an early stage, while both the establishment of the Mn-Si bond and also the activation of the eta(2)-coordinated Si-H moiety are controlled by the extent of Mn --> sigma*(X-Si-H) back-donation, which increases with increasing electron-withdrawing character of the X substituent trans to the metal-coordinated Si-H bond. This delocalized molecular orbital (MO) approach is complemented and supported by combined experimental and theoretical charge density studies: the source function S(r,Omega), which provides a measure of the relative importance of each atom's contribution to the density at a specific reference point r, clearly shows that all three atoms of the Mn(eta(2)-SiH) moiety contribute to a very similar extent to the density at the Mn-Si bond critical point, in pleasing agreement with the MO model. Hence, we advance a consistent and unifying concept which accounts for the degree of Si-H activation in these silane sigma-bond complexes.
Asunto(s)
Complejos de Coordinación/química , Silanos/química , Modelos Moleculares , Estructura Molecular , Difracción de NeutronesRESUMEN
The bonding in Mn(eta2-SiH) complexes is interpreted in terms of an asymmetric oxidative addition whose extent is controlled by the substitution pattern at the hypercoordinate silicon centre, and especially by the ligand trans to the eta2-coordinating SiH moiety.
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The transition metal carbide superconductor Sc(3)CoC(4) may represent a new benchmark system of quasi-one-dimensional (quasi-1D) superconducting behavior. We investigate the superconducting transition of a high-quality single crystalline sample by electrical transport experiments. Our data show that the superconductor goes through a complex dimensional crossover below the onset T(c) of 4.5 K. First, a quasi-1D fluctuating superconducting state with finite resistance forms in the [CoC(4)](∞) ribbons which are embedded in a Sc matrix in this material. At lower temperature, the transversal Josephson or proximity coupling of neighboring ribbons establishes a 3D bulk superconducting state. This dimensional crossover is very similar to Tl(2)Mo(6)Se(6), which for a long time has been regarded as the most appropriate model system of a quasi-1D superconductor. Sc(3)CoC(4) appears to be even more in the 1D limit than Tl(2)Mo(6)Se(6).