Abstract

Molecules based on polyatomic bismuth substructures are currently attracting a lot of attention owing to this heavy and essentially non-toxic element's uncommon chemical and physical properties, which include unprecedented bonding properties. Hexaatomic {Bi6} substructures that underly more complex cluster structures were recently reported to adopt different structures or exhibit different structural details as a consequence of the charge of the {Bi6} unit. This leads to either crown-shaped cycles for a nominal Bi66- or differently distorted trigonal prisms for compositions close to Bi62-. It was predicted by quantum chemistry that Bi64- should adopt a distinctly distorted boat-like shape, yet a corresponding compound has remained elusive. Here, we report a proof of this assumption by the synthesis and isolation of [K(crypt-222)]2[Bi6{Zn(hmds)}2]∙1.5THF (1), comprising a bimetallic [Bi6{Zn(hmds)}2]2- cluster that fulfils the prediction for the geometric and electronic structure of the missing link (crypt-222 = 4,7,13,16,21,24-hexaoxa-1,10-diazabicyclo-[8.8.8]hexa-cosane, hmds = hexamethyldisilazanid). A detailed quantum chemical study shows how the nature of Lewis-acidic transition metal complexes - in particular, 12-electron fragments - control and fine-tune the resulting {Bi6} architectures in accordance with the degree of electron-withdrawal from the polybismuthide core.

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