“…As it is ambidentate, the thiocyanate anion is an appropriate candidate for developing building blocks assembling coordination chemistry, leading to the formation of complexes with multidimensionality and diversified structures [20][21][22]. In fact, the thiocyanate anion is a bidentate ligand, which has numerous terminals and bridging coordination modes with two donor atoms either by sulfur or by nitrogen [23]. Thus, the flexible coordination features of these anions could stabilize the intermediate states of the transition metal centers inducing varied crystal structures.…”