Abstract

Reactions between metal carbonates from d5 to d10 systems and glutamic acid are used to obtain molecular metal complexes and metal–organic frameworks (MOFs). When the ligand is an amino acid, these MOFs belong to the BioMOF class (metal–organic frameworks for biological and medical applications). The metal carbonates of the d5, d6, and d8 systems produce molecular complexes with general formulas [M(GluH)2(H2O)2], whereas those of the d7, d9, and d10 systems produce compounds of the type [M(Glu)(H2O)·H2O]n. Through these syntheses one can explore, among others, concepts largely related to coordination chemistry such as crystal field splitting, weak and strong fields, the chelate effect, coordination number, metal–ligand stability series, Jahn–Teller distortion, acidity and basicity concepts, and crystal structure. In addition, these experiments also provide an opportunity to discuss interaction stability between metal ions with carbonate and hydroxide anions expressed by physical–chemical parameters such as absolute hardness and natural indices for chemical softness, as well as by the respective Pourbaix diagrams.

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