“…The growing interest on the coordination compounds of copper with various N-donor ligands, comes mainly from their capability of combining characteristic structural flexibility [13,14], mimicking of protein active sites [15][16][17], ease of preparation [18,19], and stabilization of both oxidation states of the metal usual in biological systems [20,21]. Considerable interest in various N and O donor ligands especially Schiff bases and their transition metal complexes have also grown in the areas of chemistry and biology due to biological activities, such as antiviral [22,23], antitumor [24,25], bactericidal [26,27], fungicidal [18] and nonlinear optical properties [28,29]. This type of the compounds have been used for metal analyses, for device applications related to telecommunications, optical computing [30,31], storage [32,33], and information processing [34,35].…”