Abstract
The Schiff-base condensations of 1,3-diaminopropane with a protected thiophenol dialdehyde in the presence of Ni(2+), Pd(2+) or Zn(2+) can be controlled to yield either mononuclear acyclic, or 2 + 2 and 4 + 4 macrocyclic complexes by the choice of both metal cation and counteranion. The Ni(2+) complex of the 2 + 2 macrocycle contains two square-planar nickel ions and shows an arrangement similar to one observed previously: the mu-S atoms of the thiophenolate groups are pyramidal and lie on the same side of the plane defined by the four N atoms of the macrocycle to give a V-shaped molecule. By contrast, the Zn(2+) complex of the 2 + 2 macrocycle undergoes oligomerization to yield a bowl-shaped hexanuclear complex that includes a mu(3)-carbonate anion. Essential for this topology is the presence of three mu(3)-S-thiophenolato groups that link the three macrocyclic units to form a Zn(3)S(3) ring that seals the bottom part of the bowl. In this arrangement, one of the pyramidal mu(3)-S atoms in each dinuclear Zn(2+) complex is inverted relative to the arrangement observed for the dinickel complexes. Molecular modelling suggests that inversion about the mu-S atoms of the 2 + 2 macrocyclic complexes is readily accessible at room temperature and that the contrasting arrangements observed for the Ni(2+) and Zn(2+) complexes are those energetically most favourable for the respective metal ions. Rare 4 + 4 macrocyclic complexes are isolated as neutral dinuclear complexes for Ni(2+) and Pd(2+) and as a tetranuclear complex cation for Zn(2+). The topologies of these systems contrast significantly: those with two square-planar Ni(2+) or Pd(2+) ions form extended rings, while that with Zn(2+) forms a sulfur-lined cylinder which hosts acetonitrile molecules in the crystalline state. Reaction conditions can also be optimised to produce 2 + 1 acyclic ligands as their mononuclear Ni(2+) and Pd(2+) complexes, providing potentially useful building blocks for production of more complicated macrocyclic and supramolecular systems.
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