posted on 2012-08-06, 00:00authored byAnimesh Das, Felix J. Klinke, Serhiy Demeshko, Steffen Meyer, Sebastian Dechert, Franc Meyer
A new family of tetranuclear nickel cube complexes [Ni4L4(solv)4] (1, solv = MeOH; 2, solv = H2O; H2L = pyrazole-based
tridentate {ONO} ligand) has been studied in detail, in particular
by X-ray diffraction and superconducting quantum interference device
(SQUID) magnetometry. Different solvates 1·H2O, 2·4C3H6O, 2·CH2Cl2, and 2·H2O were obtained in crystalline form. Only small
structural variations were found for the Ni–O–Ni angles
of the [Ni4O4] cores of those compounds, but
these slight variations have dramatic consequences for the magnetic
properties. [Ni4L4(MeOH)4]·H2O (1·H2O) and [Ni4L4(H2O)4]·H2O (2·H2O) can be reversibly interconverted in the solid state by exposure
to the respective solvent, MeOH or H2O, and this goes along
with a switching of the spin ground state from magnetic (ST = 4) to diamagnetic (ST =
0). Likewise the (irreversible) loss of lattice solvent in [Ni4L4(H2O)4]·4C3H6O (2·4C3H6O) to give 2·2C3H6O changes the ground state from ST = 4 to ST = 0. In view of these dramatic
solvatomagnetic effects for the present [Ni4L4(solv)4] complexes, which occur upon extrusion of lattice
solvent or facile exchange of coordinated solvent molecules while
keeping the robust [Ni4O4] core intact, a note
of care is issued: whenever magnetic data are obtained for powdered
material or for crystals that easily loose lattice solvent molecules,
the magnetic properties may not necessarily reflect the situation
observed in the corresponding single crystal diffraction study. Finally,
a thorough analysis of the present series of complexes as well as
other {Ni4(μ3-OR)4} cubes reported
in the literature confirms that a correlation between the (Ni–O–Ni)av bond angle and J in [Ni4O4] cubane complexes does indeed exist.