Publication | Closed Access
Impact of Metallophilicity on “Colossal” Positive and Negative Thermal Expansion in a Series of Isostructural Dicyanometallate Coordination Polymers
120
Citations
56
References
2009
Year
Materials ScienceInorganic ChemistryEngineeringLinear Chain CompoundInorganic MaterialPositive Thermal ExpansionNegative Thermal ExpansionPhysical ChemistryMain Group ChemistryCoordination PolymerChemistryCrystallographyOrganometallic PolymerThermal Expansion PropertiesFunctional MaterialsThermal ExpansionPolymers
Five isostructural dicyanometallate coordination polymers containing metallophilic interactions (In[M(CN)(2)](3) (M = Ag, Au), KCd[M(CN)(2)](3), and KNi[Au(CN)(2)](3)) were synthesized and investigated by variable-temperature powder X-ray diffraction to probe their thermal expansion properties. The compounds have a trigonal unit cell and show positive thermal expansion (PTE) in the ab plane, where Kagome sheets of M atoms reside, and negative thermal expansion (NTE) along the trigonal c axis, perpendicular to these sheets. The magnitude of thermal expansion is unusually large in all cases (40 x 10(-6) K(-1) < |alpha| < 110 x 10(-6) K(-1)). The system with the weakest metallophilic interactions, In[Ag(CN)(2)](3), shows the most "colossal" thermal expansion of the series (alpha(a) = 105(2) x 10(-6) K(-1), alpha(c) = -84(2) x 10(-6) K(-1) at 295 K), while systems containing stronger Au-Au interactions show relatively reduced thermal expansion. Thus, it appears that strong metallophilic interactions hinder colossal thermal expansion behavior. Additionally, the presence of K(+) counterions also reduces the magnitude of thermal expansion.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1