The new podand ligand hydrotris[3-(6-methyl)pyridin-2-ylpyrazol-1-yl]borate [L-1](-) was prepared which contains three bidentate pyrazolyl/pyridine arms attached to a {BH}(-) head-group. This ligand differs from an earlier ligand hydrotris[3-(2-pyridyl)pyrazol-1-yl]borate [L-2](-) by the presence of methyl groups attached to the C-6 positions of the pyridyl rings, which would interfere with each other sterically if the ligand co-ordinated in a fully hexadentate manner. Instead, crystallographic analysis of the complexes [M(L-1)(NO3)(2)(H2O)] (M = Eu, Tb or Cd) showed that partial dissociation of the podand occurs to relieve this potential steric problem: either one or two of the pyridyl groups are not co-ordinated, such that [L-1](-) is penta- or tetra-dentate, but instead are involved in intramolecular N ... H-O hydrogen-bonding interactions with the co-ordinated water molecule. The presence of both structural forms in single crystals of the gadolinium and europium complexes shows that interconversion between them in solution must be facile. Variable-temperature H-1 NMR spectra of the diamagnetic lanthanum(III) analogue shows that, whereas all three ligand arms are equivalent on the NMR timescale at high temperatures, at -80 degrees C there is mirror symmetry in the complex such that two arms are equivalent and the third is different from the other two; this is consistent with the crystalline form in which [L-1](-) is tetradentate with two pendant pyridyl arms, which has pseudo-mirror symmetry. Luminescence studies showed that whereas the ligand-based luminescence is retained in the gadolinium(III) complex, in the europium(III) and terbium(III) complexes the ligand-centred emission is quenched by ligand-to-metal energy transfer, resulting in the usual metal-centred emission spectra. The intensity of the emission from the europium(III) and terbium(III) complexes of [L-1](-) is substantially reduced compared to the emission from the analogous complexes [M(L-2)(NO3)(2)] (M = Eu or Tb) which we ascribe to the sterically induced poorer co-ordination of the podand ligand, resulting in (i) less efficient ligand-to-metal energy transfer, and (ii) co-ordination of labile solvent molecules (H2O) to the metal centres.
Lanthanide complexes of a new sterically hindered potentially hexadentate podand ligand based on a tris(pyrazolyl)borate core; crystal structures, solution structures and luminescence properties
Armaroli N
1999
Abstract
The new podand ligand hydrotris[3-(6-methyl)pyridin-2-ylpyrazol-1-yl]borate [L-1](-) was prepared which contains three bidentate pyrazolyl/pyridine arms attached to a {BH}(-) head-group. This ligand differs from an earlier ligand hydrotris[3-(2-pyridyl)pyrazol-1-yl]borate [L-2](-) by the presence of methyl groups attached to the C-6 positions of the pyridyl rings, which would interfere with each other sterically if the ligand co-ordinated in a fully hexadentate manner. Instead, crystallographic analysis of the complexes [M(L-1)(NO3)(2)(H2O)] (M = Eu, Tb or Cd) showed that partial dissociation of the podand occurs to relieve this potential steric problem: either one or two of the pyridyl groups are not co-ordinated, such that [L-1](-) is penta- or tetra-dentate, but instead are involved in intramolecular N ... H-O hydrogen-bonding interactions with the co-ordinated water molecule. The presence of both structural forms in single crystals of the gadolinium and europium complexes shows that interconversion between them in solution must be facile. Variable-temperature H-1 NMR spectra of the diamagnetic lanthanum(III) analogue shows that, whereas all three ligand arms are equivalent on the NMR timescale at high temperatures, at -80 degrees C there is mirror symmetry in the complex such that two arms are equivalent and the third is different from the other two; this is consistent with the crystalline form in which [L-1](-) is tetradentate with two pendant pyridyl arms, which has pseudo-mirror symmetry. Luminescence studies showed that whereas the ligand-based luminescence is retained in the gadolinium(III) complex, in the europium(III) and terbium(III) complexes the ligand-centred emission is quenched by ligand-to-metal energy transfer, resulting in the usual metal-centred emission spectra. The intensity of the emission from the europium(III) and terbium(III) complexes of [L-1](-) is substantially reduced compared to the emission from the analogous complexes [M(L-2)(NO3)(2)] (M = Eu or Tb) which we ascribe to the sterically induced poorer co-ordination of the podand ligand, resulting in (i) less efficient ligand-to-metal energy transfer, and (ii) co-ordination of labile solvent molecules (H2O) to the metal centres.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.