Synthetic diversity and change in nuclearity in [Co–Dy] coordination aggregates: bridge removal, solvent induced structural reorganization and AC susceptibility measurements†
Abstract
Three new cobalt(II/III)-dysprosium(III) complexes, [DyIII3CoII2CoIII2(L1)2(O2CCMe3)8(OH)4(OMe)2(H2O)4]·Dy(η1-O2CCMe3)2(η2-O2CCMe3)2(MeOH)2·4H2O (1), [DyIII3CoII2CoIII2(L2)2(O2CCMe3)8(OH)4(OMe)2(MeOH)2(H2O)2]·Dy(η1-O2CCMe3)2(η2-O2CCMe3)2(MeOH)2·4MeOH (2) and DyIII2CoII2CoIII2(L2)2(O2CCMe3)10(OH)2 (3) have been reported. In the heptanuclear 3d–4f monocationic aggregates in 1 and 2 the three dysprosium and four cobalt sites are arranged into a vertex shared dicubane structure, induced by two structure-directing ligands. Interestingly, a unique and previously unknown dysprosium(III)-pivalate based counter anion, Dy(η1-O2CCMe3)2(η2-O2CCMe3)2(MeOH)2−, was trapped by the monocationic cores during crystallization. MeCN induced structural rearrangement of 2 through loss of OMe− bridges and dysprosium(III) ions at the shared vertex resulted in the hexanuclear 3d–4f neutral aggregate 3, in which two dysprosium and four cobalt sites exhibit a near planar disposition. HRMS(+ve) of solutions of 1 and 2 revealed the pathway for aggregation processes and solvent induced structural transformation along with the importance of bridging OMe− in directing the formation of these compounds. Magnetic studies show a non-zero out-of-phase component in the AC susceptibility measurements of 1 but not in 2 and 3, although 1 and 2 have a very similar {CoIII2CoII2DyIII3} core and another DyIII center. Ab initio single-ion calculations point to the different single-ion anisotropic behavior for DyIII centers (energy in cm−1 and g-tensors) as well as negative and positive D values for CoII sites in 1 and 2 respectively reaffirming the experimental result. However, calculations envision that, zero-field out-of-phase signal and no out-of-phase signal in 1 and 2 respectively do not solely generate from the single-ion Dy/Co anisotropies and the overall relaxation mechanism can be understood by considering the exchange interactions between DyIII–DyIII and DyIII–CoII centres.