RESUMEN
We synthesized a (1-propylpyridinium)2 [ReN(CN)4 ]-type organic-inorganic hybrid exhibiting water-vapor-induced drastic structural changes of the [ReN(CN)4 ]2- assemblies. Specifically, upon exposure to water vapor, dehydrated nitrido-bridged chains were converted to hydrated cyanido-bridged tetranuclear clusters via rearrangements of large molecular building units in the crystals. These switchable assembly forms display substantially different photo-physical properties, although in both cases the emission is caused by a metal-centered d-d transition. The nitrido-bridged chain exhibited a near-infrared (749â nm) emission, which blue-shifted as the temperature increased, while a visible (561â nm) emission and its red shift was demonstrated by the cyanido-bridged cluster.
RESUMEN
Recently, non-crystalline coordination materials have been shown to represent a versatile class of functional materials. However, such materials incorporating metal complex clusters have remained largely unexplored. Herein, we demonstrate that a luminescent tetranuclear ReV cluster melts at 489 K, with the cluster structure being maintained in the corresponding supercooled ionic liquid phase.
RESUMEN
Control of ion arrangements in ionic liquids represents a major challenge owing to the presence of the predominant coulombic interactions between cationic and anionic ion species that forms the coulombic ordering. Here, water-induced ion rearrangement in a room-temperature ionic liquid (RT-IL) metal complex, (1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium)2 [MnN(CN)4 ], is demonstrated through coordinative interactions between anions. Solidification occurred, which was associated with the formation of a "separated" structure consisting of cation columns and anionic cyanide-bridged one-dimensional coordination polymers. The energy diagram is in accord with the resultant RT-IL incorporating mononuclear [MnN(CN)4 ]2- molecules being a kinetic phase stabilized by inter-ion repulsions of the anionic divalent metal complex moieties. Water acts to decrease the coulombic interactions, including repulsion, giving rise to breaking of the coulombic ordering arising from coordination bond formation in the IL phase.