Binuclear complexes as tectons in designing supramolecular solid-state architectures*
Marius Andruh
Faculty of Chemistry, Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory, University of Bucharest, Str. Dumbrava Rosie nr. 23, 020464-Bucharest, Romania
Abstract: Oligonuclear complexes as well as coordination polymers with various network topologies can be obtained by using homo- or heterobinuclear complexes as starting materials. These building blocks are stable complexes, where the metal ions are held together by compartmental ligands, or alkoxo-bridged Cu(II) species. The binuclear nodes can be connected through appropriate exo-dentate ligands, or through metal-containing anions (e.g., [M(CN)6]3-, M = CrIII, FeIII, CoIII). A rich variety of 3d-3d and 3d-4f heterometallic complexes, with interesting architectures and topologies of the spin carriers, has been obtained. A particular case is the one concerning the 3d-4f binuclear nodes. Following this strategy, we were able to obtain coordination polymers containing three different spin carriers (2p-3d-4f; 3d-3d'-4f).
Keywords: Crystal engineering; molecular magnetism; lanthanide complexes; Cu(II) complexes; tetranuclear complexes.
*Paper based on a presentation at the 4th International Conference of the Chemical Societies of the South-Eastern European Countries (ICOSECS-4), Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro, 18-21 July 2004. Other presentations are published in this issue, pp. 1655-1752.