We succeeded in synthesizing of a whole family of isostructural solvates of the copper(II) hexafluoroacetylacetonate complex with pyrazolyl-substituted nitronyl nitroxide (L): Cu(hfac)2L x 0.Solv. The main feature inherent in nature of Cu(hfac)2L x 0.5 Solv single crystals is their incredible mechanical stability and ability to undergo reversible structural rearrangements with temperature variation, accompanied by anomalies on the mu(eff(T)) dependence. Structural investigation of the complexes over a wide temperature range before and after the structural transition and the ensuing magnetic phase transition showed that the spatial peculiarities of the solvent molecules incorporated into the solid govern the character of the mu(eff(T)) dependence and the temperature region of the magnetic anomaly. Thus, doping of crystals with definite solvent molecules could be used as an efficient method of control over the magnetic anomaly temperature (T(a)). The investigation of this special series of crystals has revealed the relationship between the chemical step and the magnetic properties. It was shown that "mild" modification of T(a) for Cu(hfac)2L x 0.5 Solv required a much smaller structural step than the typical change of one -CH2- fragment in a homologous series in organic chemistry. Quantum-chemical calculations with the use of X-ray diffraction data allowed us to trace the character of changes in the exchange interaction parameters in the range of the phase transition. In the temperature range of the phase transition, the exchange parameter changes substantially. The gradual decrease in the magnetic moment, observed in most experiments during sample cooling to T(a), is the result of the gradual increase in the fraction of the low-temperature phase in the high-temperature phase.
A new group of "breathing" crystals has been synthesized. These are aromatic solvates of the copper(II) hexafluoroacetylacetonate complex with spin-labeled pyrazole Cu(hfac)(2)L·0.5Solv, where L is 2-(1-butyl-1H-pyrazol-4-yl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethyl-4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazole-3-oxide-1-oxyl and Solv is benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, propylbenzene, butylbenzene, styrene, o-xylene, m-xylene, p-xylene, 1,4-bis(trifluoromethyl)benzene, 1-methyl-4-ethylbenzene, 1-methyl-4-vinylbenzene, 1,4-diethylbenzene, 1,2,3-trimethylbenzene, or 1,2,4-trimethylbenzene. The main feature of Cu(hfac)(2)L·0.5Solv single crystals is their remarkable mechanical stability and ability to undergo thermally induced structural rearrangements accompanied by spin-crossover-like phenomena. The structures of Cu(hfac)(2)L·0.5Solv solvates are similar and based on mutually parallel {Cu(hfac)(2)L}(∞) heterospin chains with a "head-to-head" motif. The localization of voids with guest molecules being the same in all crystals, the temperature dependence of the effective magnetic moment (μ(eff)) for Cu(hfac)(2)L·0.5Solv is determined by the structure of the guest molecules, along which the polymer chains are "gliding" when the temperature changes. When the temperature decreased from 300 to 100-50 K, μ(eff) decreased, abruptly or gradually, from 2.7-2.4 to ~1.8 β for the majority of Cu(hfac)(2)L·0.5Solv except the solvates with benzene, toluene, and 1,4-bis(trifluoromethyl)benzene. When Cu(hfac)(2)L·0.5C(6)H(6) and Cu(hfac)(2)L·0.5CH(3)-C(6)H(5) were cooled to 50 K, μ(eff) decreased to ~2.1-2.2 β. When Cu(hfac)(2)L·0.5(1,4-(CF(3))(2)-C(6)H(4)) was cooled to 50 K, μ(eff) initially decreased from ~2.7 to 1.9 β and then abruptly increased to ~2.4 β. A single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis of each solvate within a temperature range wider than the range of magnetic anomaly temperatures revealed a complex interrelated dynamics of the aromatic solvent guest molecules and heterospin chains. The dynamics largely depended on the orientation of the solvent guest molecules relative to the polymer chains. An analysis of the thermally induced phase transformations revealed a relationship between the structural rearrangement of Cu(hfac)(2)L·0.5Solv and the form of the magnetic anomaly on the μ(eff)(T) curve and between the structural rearrangement of the solvate and the temperature of the magnetic effect.
Chloride ion-aided one-pot template self-assembly of a mixed pyrazoloxime ligand with phenylboronic acid on a corresponding metal(II) ion as a matrix afforded the first boron-capped zinc, cobalt, iron, and manganese pseudoclathrochelate tris-pyrazoloximates. The presence of a pseudocross-linking hydrogen-bonded chloride ion is critical for their formation, as the same chloride-capped complexes were isolated even in the presence of large excesses of bromide and iodide ions. As revealed by X-ray diffraction, all complexes are capped with a chloride ion via three N-H···Cl hydrogen bonds that stabilize their pseudomacrobicyclic frameworks. The MN6 coordination polyhedra possess a distorted trigonal prismatic geometry, with the distortion angles φ between their nonequivalent N3 bases of approximately 0°. Temperature dependences of the effective magnetic moment for the paramagnetic complexes showed the encapsulated metal(II) ions to be in a high-spin state in the temperature range of 2-300 K. In the case of the iron(II) pseudoclathrochelate, density functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent DFT calculations were used to assess its spin state as well as the (57)Fe Mössbauer and UV-vis-NIR parameters. Cyclic voltammetry studies performed for these pseudomacrobicyclic complexes showed them to undergo irreversible or quasi-reversible metal-localized oxidations and reductions. As no changes are observed in the presence of a substantial excess of bromide ion, no anion-exchange reaction occurs, and thus the pseudoclathrochelates have a high affinity toward chloride anions in solution.
Breathing crystals based on polymer-chain complexes of Cu(hfac)(2) with nitroxides exhibit thermally and light-induced magnetostructural anomalies in many aspects similar to a spin crossover. In the present work, we report the synthesis and investigation of a new family of Cu(hfac)(2) complexes with tert-butylpyrazolylnitroxides and their nonradical structural analogues. The complexes with paramagnetic ligands clearly exhibit structural rearrangements in the copper(II) coordination units and accompanying magnetic phenomena characteristic for breathing crystals. Contrary to that, their structural analogues with diamagnetic ligands do not undergo rearrangements in the copper(II) coordination environments. This confirms experimentally the crucial role of paramagnetic ligands and exchange interactions between them and copper(II) ions for the origin of magnetostructural anomalies in this family of molecular magnets.
The synthesis of four nitronyl nitroxide (NN) biradicals is described which are conjugatively linked through p-ter-phenyl (PPP), ter-thiophene (TTT) and alternating phenylene (P) and thiophene (T) units as PTP and TPT. We first utilized Suzuki and Stille coupling reactions through protection and deprotection protocols to synthesize these (NN) biradicals. Single crystals were efficiently grown for radical precursors of 3, 5, 6, PPP-NNSi, PTP-NNSi, and final biradicals of TTT-NN, TPT-NN, and PPP-NN, whose structures and molecular packing were examined by X-ray diffraction studies. As a result, much smaller torsions between the NN and thiophene units (∼10°) in TTT-NN and TPT-NN than for NN and phenyl units (∼29°) in PPP-NN were observed due to smaller hindrance for a five vs a six membered ring. All four biradicals TTT-NN, TPT-NN, PTP-NN, and PPP-NN were investigated by EPR and optical spectroscopy combined with DFT calculations. The magnetic susceptibility was studied by SQUID measurements for TTT-NN and TPT-NN. The intramolecular exchange interactions for TPT-NN and TTT-NN were found in good agreement with the ones calculated by broken symmetry DFT calculations.
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