“…Here, the coordination mode does not mean accurate coordination geometry. There are six typical coordination and packing modes: asymmetric coordination of one single-chained ligand (Figure 4a) [38,39,55,61,65], symmetric coordination of two single-chained ligands lying on the opposite sides of the metal cation (Figure 4b) [41][42][43]49,51,53,55,59,60], symmetric coordination of one double-chained ligand with two chains at the opposite sides of the metal cation (Figure 4c) [45,47,54,55,62], asymmetric coordination of two single-chained ligands lying on the same side of the metal cation (Figure 4d) [44,46,48,56], asymmetric coordination of one double-chained ligand with narrow space between the chains (Figure 4e) [50,54,63], and asymmetric coordination of one double-chained ligand with wide space between the chains (Figure 4f) [41]. However, the essential feature is the formation of a layered structure that consists of M n+ inorganic layers and surfactant organic layers.…”