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Tale of a Twist: Magnetic and Optical Switching in Copper(II) Semiquinone Complexes
76
Citations
35
References
2011
Year
Chemical EngineeringEngineeringPhysicsNatural SciencesCoordination ComplexCondensed Matter PhysicsSemiquinone ComplexesOrganic ChemistrySemiquinone SpeciesMolecular ComplexOptical SwitchingRedox ChemistryChemistrySemiquinone π Orbitals
An intermediate (C) that is observed in both phenol hydroxylation and catechol oxidation with the side-on peroxide species [Cu(2)O(2)(DBED)(2)](2+) (DBED = N(1),N(2)-di-tert-butylethane-1,2-diamine) is identified as a copper(II) semiquinone species ([1](+)) through independent synthesis and characterization. The reaction of the redox-active 3,5-di-tert-butylquinone ligand with [(DBED)Cu(I)(MeCN)](+) yields a copper(II) semiquinone [1](+) complex with a singlet ground state and an intense purple chromophore (ε(580) ~ 3500 M(-1) cm(-1)). All other copper(II) semiquinone complexes characterized to date are paramagnetic and weakly colored (ε(800) ~ 500 M(-1) cm(-1)). Antiferromagnetic coupling between the Cu(II) center and the semiquinone radical in [1](+) is characterized by paramagnetic (1)H NMR and SQUID magnetometry. Comparative X-ray crystal structures along with density functional theory calculations correlate the geometric structures of copper(II) semiquinone complexes with their magnetic and optical properties. The unique observable properties of [1](+) originate from an increase in the overlap of the Cu 3d and semiquinone π orbitals resulting from a large rhombic distortion in the structure with a twist of 51°, attributable to the large isotropic demands of the tert-butyl substituents of the DBED ligand. Independent characterization of [1](+) allows the spectroscopic yields of intermediate C to be quantified in this intriguing hydroxylation reaction.
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