Design and synthesis of copper(ii) malonates with N,N′-containing linkers†
Abstract
Knowledge-based approach to the design of coordination polymers with a given architecture in general requires knowledge of regularities between the local coordination of metal atoms (or polynuclear metal-containing units), coordination modes of all ligands in a complex, and the entire framework topology. The effect of the local coordination on the dimensionality and topology of the underlying nets was demonstrated on the example of 4,4′-bipyridine (bipy), 1,2-bis(4-pyridyl)ethylene (bpe) and 1,2-bis(4-pyridyl)ethane (bpa) containing copper(II) malonates. The most abundant networks were evaluated for these compounds and compared with those for previously analyzed and synthesized zinc(II)-containing analogs. Eight novel complexes, namely [Cu(bpe)(mal)]·2CH3CN, [Cu4(bipy)4(Me2mal)4(H2O)5]·3H2O, [Cu(bpe)(HMe2mal)2]·H2O, [Cu(bpe)(Me2mal)]·H2O, [Cu4(bpe)3(Et2mal)4]·5H2O, [Cu4(bpa)3(Et2mal)4]·5.5H2O, [Cu(bpe)(Amal)]·0.25H2O, and [Cu(bpa)(Amal)]·0.25H2O (H2mal = malonic acid, H2Me2mal = dimethylmalonic acid, H2Et2mal = diethylmalonic acid, H2Amal = allylmalonic acid), were synthesized and characterized. Four of them realized the square lattice topology (sql) of their underlying nets, which is highly abundant for copper(II) malonates with N,N′-containing linkers but rarely occurs in similar complexes based on other transition metals. The UV-sensitivity of the bpe-containing complexes as well as of the previously reported complex [Cu4(bpe)3(mal)4]·6H2O was studied; and [Cu4(bpe)3(mal)4]·6H2O was found to undergo a single-crystal-to-single-crystal photoinitiated [2 + 2] cycloaddition reaction to [Cu4(bpe)(tpcb)(mal)4]·6H2O (tpcb = rctt-1,2,3,4-tetrakis(pyridin-4-yl)cyclobutane). The dc-magnetic measurements of the complexes [Cu(bpe)(Me2mal)]·H2O, [Cu(bpe)(Amal)]·0.25H2O and [Cu(bpa)(Amal)]·0.25H2O indicated the presence of very weak antiferromagnetic intermolecular interactions. Using EPR spectroscopy, it was shown that the distortion of the polyhedron of the copper(II) atom corresponded to a change in the anisotropy of the g-tensor.