Modular [FeIII8MII6]n+ (MII = Pd, Co, Ni, Cu) Coordination Cages

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Sanz, Sergio
O’Connor, Helen M.
Comar, Priyanka
Baldansuren, Amgalanbaatar
Pitak, Mateusz B.
Coles, Simon J.
Weihe, Høgni
Chilton, Nicholas F.
McInnes, Eric J. L.
Lusby, Paul J.

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The reaction of the simple metalloligand [FeIIIL3] [HL = 1-(4-pyridyl)butane-1,3-dione] with a variety of different MII salts results in the formation of a family of heterometallic cages of formulae [FeIII8PdII6L24]Cl12 (1), [FeIII8CuII6L24(H2O)4Br4]Br8 (2), [FeIII8CuII6L24(H2O)10](NO3)12 (3), [FeIII8NiII6L24(SCN)11Cl] (4), and [FeIII8CoII6L24(SCN)10(H2O)2]Cl2 (5). The metallic skeleton of each cage describes a cube in which the FeIII ions occupy the eight vertices and the MII ions lie at the center of the six faces. Direct-current magnetic susceptibility and magnetization measurements on 3–5 reveal the presence of weak antiferromagnetic exchange between the metal ions in all three cases. Computational techniques known in theoretical nuclear physics as statistical spectroscopy, which exploit the moments of the Hamiltonian to calculate relevant thermodynamic properties, determine JFe–Cu = 0.10 cm–1 for 3 and JFe–Ni = 0.025 cm–1 for 4. Q-band electron paramagnetic resonance spectra of 1 reveal a significantly wider spectral width in comparison to [FeL3], indicating that the magnitude of the FeIII zero-field splitting is larger in the heterometallic cage than in the monomer.

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Inorganic Chemistry

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