Abstract

N,N′-Bis(pyridin-4-ylmethylene)naphthalene-1,5-diamine (L) acts as a bipyridine analogue linker ligand towards {Zn7(μ4-O)2(OAc)10}, {Zn2(NCS)2(OAc)2}, and {Zn(N3)2} nodes and allows construction of three new 1-D coordination polymers, the linear chain [Zn7(μ4-O)2(OAc)10(L)]n (1), [Zn(NCS)(OAc)(L)]n (2) in ladder-type geometry and the zigzag chain [Zn(N3)2(L)]n (3). Structural characterization reveals that in 1 acetate anionic ligands connect seven Zn(II) ions through the bridging coordination modes μ3-η1,η2 and μ2-η1,η1. The resulting heptanuclear node is located on an inversion center and therefore consists of four crystallographically distinct cations; their coordination spheres correspond to distorted octahedra or tetrahedra. The Zn(II) ions in polymer 2 exhibit distorted trigonal bipyramidal {ZnN3O2} coordination; μ2-η1,η1 coordinated acetate and terminal thiocyanate ligands lead to inversion-symmetric [Zn2(NCS)2(OAc)2] secondary building units (SBU), which are further linked by the N,N′-bipyridine analogue L. Terminal coordination of two anionic azide ligands and the bridging bipyridine L result in coordination polymer 3, in which the cations adopt distorted tetrahedral {ZnN4} coordination. In all crystalline solids 1–3, adjacent 1-D chains interact through π–π stacking and non-classical (C − H···O, C − H···π) hydrogen bonds, leading to 3-D supramolecular architectures. Differences in their 3-D arrangement are due to variations in the anionic co-ligands, subtle conformational differences in the semi-rigid linker and the variable coordination sphere about the zinc cations. Thermogravimetric investigations indicate differences in both thermal stability and decomposition mode. Natural bond orbital (NBO) analysis provides a convenient basis for investigating the intramolecular bonding interactions and delocalization effects in these molecular systems. Finally, solids 1–3 exhibit intense luminescence at room temperature.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call