posted on 2023-06-23, 11:03authored byAlexander G. Martynov, Anna A. Sinelshchikova, Pavel V. Dorovatovskii, Marina A. Polovkova, Anna E. Ovchenkova, Kirill P. Birin, Gayane A. Kirakosyan, Yulia G. Gorbunova, Aslan Yu. Tsivadze
Stabilization of different conformers of sandwich phthalocyaninates
by changing the solvation environment has been demonstrated with the
examples of new heteroleptic yttrium(III) and terbium(III) triple-decker
complexes [(BuO)8Pc]M[(BuO)8Pc]M[(15C5)4Pc] (where M = Y or Tb, [(BuO)8Pc]2– = octa-n-butoxyphthalocyaninato
ligand, and [(15C5)4Pc]2– = tetra-15-crown-5-phthalocyaninato
ligand). To this end, we have performed a comprehensive crystallographic
characterization of two solvates formed by the Y(III) complex with
either toluene or dichloromethane. In the solvate with toluene, both
pairs of Pc ligands are in staggered conformations, providing both
metal cations with a square-antiprismatic environment. In contrast,
in the solvate with dichloromethane, only one cation between the BuO-
and 15C5-substituted ligands remains in a square-antiprismatic polyhedron,
while the pair of BuO-substituted ligands switches to a gauche conformation.
In both solvates, the staggered conformations are stabilized by weak
interactions of peripheral substituents with solvent molecules. Detailed
analysis of the 1H NMR spectra of the isostructural Tb(III)
complex in aliphatic and aromatic solvents demonstrates that the stabilization
of the corresponding conformations by solvation is also valid in the
solution state, resulting in an increase in the axial component of
the magnetic susceptibility tensor as the symmetry decreases from
staggered to gauche. Thus, solvation-induced conformational switching
of lanthanide trisphthalocyaninates can be used as a tool to control
their magnetic properties.