Publication | Closed Access
Oligonuclear complexes as tectons in crystal engineering: structural diversity and magnetic properties
199
Citations
53
References
2007
Year
Materials ScienceMagnetismMagnetic PropertiesInorganic ChemistryBuilding BlocksEngineeringCoordination ComplexTrinuclear ComplexesOligonuclear ComplexesPolynuclear ComplexesMolecular ComplexCoordination PolymerChemistryMolecular TectonicsCrystallographyInorganic SynthesisBiophysicsInorganic Compound
This article focuses on the employment of bi- and trinuclear complexes as building blocks in designing novel heterometallic systems. A large variety of polynuclear complexes, ranging from high-nuclearity clusters to high-dimensionality coordination polymers, can be constructed by taking advantage of the high flexibility of the multimetallic nodes. The following oligonuclear complexes are currently used as tectons in our laboratory: (a) bis(alkoxo)-bridged copper(ii) species; (b) homobinuclear species with metal ions held together by end-off, or macrocyclic compartmental ligands; (c) heterometallic complexes with dissymmetric compartmental ligands. The 3d-4f nodes are particularly interesting since the metal ions interact selectively with various spacers. The intra-node exchange interactions, as well as those between the resulting spins, generate interesting magnetic properties.
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