Publication | Closed Access
Carbon Dioxide as a Solubility “Switch” for the Reversible Dissolution of Highly Fluorinated Complexes and Reagents in Organic Solvents: Application to Crystallization
51
Citations
24
References
2002
Year
X-ray CrystallographyCarbon DioxideCrystal StructureSolvent ExtractionEngineeringOrganic ChemistryChemistrySolution (Chemistry)Chemical EngineeringOrganic SolventsReversible DissolutionQuantitative RecoveryStructure ElucidationCrystal FormationMaterials ScienceFluorous SynthesisOrganometallic Solid CompoundsCrystallographyCrystal Structure DesignLiquid HydrocarbonsNatural Sciences
Highly fluorinated organic or organometallic solid compounds can be made to dissolve in liquid hydrocarbons by the application of 20-70 bar of CO(2) gas. Subsequently releasing the gas causes the compounds to precipitate or crystallize, giving quantitative recovery of the solid. The resulting crystals can be of sufficient quality for single-crystal X-ray crystallography; the structures of Rh(2)(O(2)CCF(2)CF(2)CF(3))(4)(DMF)(2), Rh(2)(O(2)C(CF(2))(9)F)(4)(MeOH)(2), Cr(hfacac)(3), and P[C(6)H(3)(3,5-CF(3))(2)](3) have been determined from crystals grown in this manner.
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