posted on 2012-02-06, 00:00authored byMasumi Kuritani, Shohei Tashiro, Mitsuhiko Shionoya
A phenanthroline-based macrocycle 1 has
been newly
developed which has two chemically equivalent metal chelating sites
within the spatially restricted cavity for dinuclear metal arrangement.
The macrocycle 1 reacts with Zn(CF3CO2)2 or ZnCl2 to form homodinuclear Zn(II)-complexes.
A single-crystal X-ray structural analysis of the resulting Zn21(CF3CO2)4 determined
the complex structure in which two Zn(II) ions are bound by two phenanthroline
sites and two CF3CO2– ions
bind to each Zn(II) ion in a tetrahedral geometry. Similarly, a homodinuclear
Cu(I)-macrocycle was formed from 1 and Cu(CH3CN)4BF4. Notably, from 1 and an
equimolar mixture of Cu(CH3CN)4BF4 and Zn(CF3CO2)2, a heterodinuclear
Cu(I)–Zn(II)-macrocycle was exclusively formed in high yield
(>90%) because of the relatively low stability of the dinuclear
Cu(I)-macrocycle.
A heterodinuclear Ag(I)–Zn(II)-macrocycle was similarly formed
with fairly high selectivity from a mixture of Ag(I) and Zn(II) ions.
Such selective heterodinuclear metal arrangement was not observed
with other combinations of M-Zn(II) (M = Li(I), Mg(II), Pd(II), Hg(II),
La(III), and Tb(III)).