By the deliberate choice of the internal ligands of the porous nanocapsules [{(Mo)Mo(5)}(12){Mo(2)(ligand)}(30)](n-), the respective cavities' shells can be differently sized/functionalized. This allows one to trap the same large number of water molecules, that is, 100 in a capsule cavity with formate ligands having a larger space available, as well as in a cavity containing sulfates and hypophosphites, that is, with less space. Whereas the 100 molecules fill the space completely in the second case in which they are organized in three shells, a four-shell system with underoccupation and broken hydrogen bonds is observed in the other case. This is an unprecedented result in terms of the structurally well defined special forms of "higher and lower density" water molecule assemblies. Precisely, by replacing the larger ligands in the mentioned nanocapsule type by formates, voids in the capsule cavity of (HC(NH(2))(2))(22)[{(HC(NH(2))(2))(20)+(H(2)O)(100)} subset{(Mo)Mo(5)O(21)(H(2)O)(6)}(12){Mo(2)O(4)(HCO(2))}(30)]ca. 200 H(2)O are generated that get filled with water molecules concomitant with an expansion of the three to four shell {H(2)O}(100) cluster. The water shells in both capsules containing different ligands are organized in the form of dodecahedra (partly with underoccupation) and a strongly distorted rhombicosidodecahedron spanned by a {H(2)O}(60)={(H(2)O)(5)}(12) aggregate. The well-defined water shells only emerge if cations cannot enter into the capsules, which is achieved by closing the pores with plugs/guests such as formamidinium cations. The work is based on the syntheses of two new compounds, related single-crystal X-ray diffraction studies, and molecular dynamics simulations, which show remarkably that water molecule shell structuring occurs in the capsules due to the confined conditions even in the case of open pores and at room temperature if cation uptake is prevented.
A magneto-structural study of two salicylamidoxime-based {Mn(6)} single-molecule magnets revealed that their anisotropy energy barriers, which can reach the current record for d-transition metal complexes, are strongly dependent upon the precise arrangement of ligands and the solvation state.
Salicylamidoxime was used to synthesize 13 new polynuclear Mn(III) complexes. We present the crystallographic structures, the magnetic susceptibility and the magnetization measurements of eight of them (1-8) with the general formula [Mn(6)O(2)(H(2)N-sao)(6)(L)(2)(solvent)(4-6)] (L = carboxylate, chloride, 2-cyanophenolate; solvent = H(2)O, MeOH, EtOH, py). These complexes consist of two trinuclear {Mn(III)(3)(μ(3)-O)(H(2)N-sao)(3)}(+) cationic units linked together via two oximate and two phenolate oxygen atoms. All behave as single-molecule magnets, with the spin ground state varying from 4 to 12 and anisotropy energy barriers from 24 to 86 K, the latter being as high as the present record barrier in the Mn(6) complexes. DFT calculations were performed to compute the exchange magnetic coupling constants J between the metallic ions and to provide an orbital interpretation of exchange. Our results are in line with previously reported results with the parent salicylaldoxime derivatives. The Mn-N-O-Mn torsion angle appears as the main parameter controlling the J values. The critical angle where the exchange coupling between two Mn(III) switches from antiferromagnetic to ferromagnetic is 27°, less than the one found in related complexes with salicylaldoxime (30°). We propose a structural classification of the {Mn(6)} complexes in four classes depending on the coordination of the axial carboxylate. The work points out the structural flexibility of such systems, their sensitivity to solvent effects and their ability to achieve high anisotropy energy barriers by simple desolvation.
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