Issue 5, 2003

Asymmetry in endogenously bridged binuclear copper(ii) and zinc(ii) complexes formed by 1,2-bis[1,4,7-triazacyclonon-1-yl]propan-2-ol

Abstract

Endogenously bridged binuclear copper(II) and zinc(II) complexes of singly deprotonated 1,2-bis[1,4,7-triazacyclonon-1-yl]propan-2-ol (T2PrOH) have been prepared by reacting the ligand hexabromide salt with appropriate metal salts. An X-ray structural analysis of the Cu(II) complex, [Cu2(T2PrO)Br2]Br·2H2O (1), confirmed the presence of a complex cation, [Cu2(T2PrO)Br2]+, which consists of Cu(II) centres linked by an endogenous alkoxo bridge. Three N donors from the tacn macrocycle and a bromo ligand complete the coordination sphere. The two Cu(II) centres are in slightly different distorted square pyramidal (SPY) Cu(II) geometries. A magnetic susceptibility study of 1 revealed the presence of moderately strong antiferromagnetic coupling between the Cu(II) centres (J = −86 cm−1), as found for other binuclear Cu(II) complexes bridged by endogenous alkoxo groups. The molecular structure of the Zn(II) complex, [Zn2(T2PrO)Br(H2O)2](ClO4)2 (2), apart from confirming that the two Zn(II) were bridged by an endogenous alkoxo group, revealed coordination asymmetry in the two Zn(II) centres. One Zn(II) centre is six-coordinate and pseudo-octahedral with the coordination sphere occupied by three tacn nitrogens, the bridging oxygen, one bromo and one water ligand, while the other is five-coordinate and pseudo-square pyramidal, lacking the bromo ligand.

Graphical abstract: Asymmetry in endogenously bridged binuclear copper(ii) and zinc(ii) complexes formed by 1,2-bis[1,4,7-triazacyclonon-1-yl]propan-2-ol

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
20 Nov 2002
Accepted
23 Dec 2002
First published
03 Feb 2003

Dalton Trans., 2003, 866-871

Asymmetry in endogenously bridged binuclear copper(II) and zinc(II) complexes formed by 1,2-bis[1,4,7-triazacyclonon-1-yl]propan-2-ol

F. H. Fry, B. Moubaraki, K. S. Murray, L. Spiccia, M. Warren, B. W. Skelton and A. H. White, Dalton Trans., 2003, 866 DOI: 10.1039/B211490A

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