TY - JOUR
T1 - Flexible thioether-Ag(I) interactions for assembling large organic ligands into crystalline networks
AU - Huang, Guo
AU - Tsang, Chun-Kwan
AU - Xu, Zhengtao
AU - Li, Kunhao
AU - Zeller, Matthias
AU - Hunter, Allen D.
AU - Chui, Stephen Sin-Yin
AU - Che, Chi-Ming
PY - 2009/3/4
Y1 - 2009/3/4
N2 - From searching the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD), we noticed an exceptionally widespread distribution of the interatomic distances (from 2.39 to 3.52 Å) between thioether S atoms and Ag(I) ions, in comparison with the cases in other common ligands such as nitriles and pyridyls. The variable bonding distances point to a highly flexible and reversible nature of thioether-Ag(I) interaction, which might help crystallize large and complex organic molecules into ordered coordination networks under mild conditions. We provide a number of new structures for illustration. In 1, two Ag(I) ions are coordinated by three 1,2,3- tris(methylthio)phenyl groups (i.e., 9 S atoms) to form a three-bladed paddlewheel block as a node for an enlarged honeycomb sheet. In 2, a porphyrin molecule with four l,2,3-tris(phenylthio)phenyl groups coordinates to Ag(I) atoms to form a parallelogram net, featuring free-standing phenylthio groups in the channel. In 3, a starburst molecule with six 4-methylthiophenyl groups attached to the triphenylene core is crystallized with AgOTf (triflate) to form a complex three-dimensional net, with a supramolecular topology featuring a combination of edge-sharing octahedra (the rutile chain) and vertex-sharing octahedra (the ReO 3 chain). © 2009 American Chemical Society.
AB - From searching the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD), we noticed an exceptionally widespread distribution of the interatomic distances (from 2.39 to 3.52 Å) between thioether S atoms and Ag(I) ions, in comparison with the cases in other common ligands such as nitriles and pyridyls. The variable bonding distances point to a highly flexible and reversible nature of thioether-Ag(I) interaction, which might help crystallize large and complex organic molecules into ordered coordination networks under mild conditions. We provide a number of new structures for illustration. In 1, two Ag(I) ions are coordinated by three 1,2,3- tris(methylthio)phenyl groups (i.e., 9 S atoms) to form a three-bladed paddlewheel block as a node for an enlarged honeycomb sheet. In 2, a porphyrin molecule with four l,2,3-tris(phenylthio)phenyl groups coordinates to Ag(I) atoms to form a parallelogram net, featuring free-standing phenylthio groups in the channel. In 3, a starburst molecule with six 4-methylthiophenyl groups attached to the triphenylene core is crystallized with AgOTf (triflate) to form a complex three-dimensional net, with a supramolecular topology featuring a combination of edge-sharing octahedra (the rutile chain) and vertex-sharing octahedra (the ReO 3 chain). © 2009 American Chemical Society.
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U2 - 10.1021/cg800869u
DO - 10.1021/cg800869u
M3 - RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal
SN - 1528-7483
VL - 9
SP - 1444
EP - 1451
JO - Crystal Growth and Design
JF - Crystal Growth and Design
IS - 3
ER -