Low intrinsic toxicity, high solubility, and stability are important and necessary features of gold nanoparticles to be used in the biomedical field. In this context, charged nanoparticles proved to be very versatile, and among them charged mixed-monolayer gold nanoparticles, displaying monolayers with well-defined morphologies, represent a paradigm. By using mixtures of hydrogenated and fluorinated thiols, the formation of monolayer domains may be brought to an extreme because of the immiscibility of fluorinated and hydrogenated chains. Following this rationale, mixed monolayer gold nanoparticles featuring ammonium, sulfonate, or carboxylic groups on their surface were prepared by using amphiphilic hydrogenated thiols and 1H,1H,2H,2H-perfluoro-alkanethiols. The toxicity of these systems was assessed in HeLa cells and was found to be, in general, low even for the cationic nanoparticles which usually show a high cytotoxicity and is comparable to that of homoligand gold nanoparticles displaying amphiphiliccharge neutralhydrogenated or fluorinated thiolates in their monolayer. These properties make the mixed ligand monolayer gold nanoparticles an interesting new candidate for medical application.
The development of new families of active and selective single‐component catalysts based on earth‐abundant metal is of interest from a sustainable chemistry perspective. In this context, anionic mono(formazanate) iron(II) complexes bearing labile halide ligands, which possess both Lewis acidic and nucleophilic functionalities, have been developed as novel single‐component homogeneous catalysts for the reaction of CO2 with epoxides to produce cyclic carbonates. The influence of the halide ligand and the electronic properties of the formazanate ligand backbone on the catalytic activity are investigated by employing the iron(II) complexes with and without an additional nucleophile. Very high selectivity is achieved towards the formation of the cyclic carbonate products from various terminal and internal epoxides without the need of a cocatalyst.
The transition between spin states in d-block metal complexes has important ramifications for their structure and reactivity, with applications ranging from information storage materials to understanding catalytic activity of metalloenzymes. Tuning the ligand field (Δ O ) by steric and/or electronic effects has provided spin-crossover compounds for several transition metals in the periodic table, but this has mostly been limited to coordinatively saturated metal centers in octahedral ligand environments. Spin-crossover complexes with low coordination numbers are much rarer. Here we report a series of four-coordinate, (pseudo)tetrahedral Fe(II) complexes with formazanate ligands and demonstrate how electronic substituent effects can be used to modulate the thermally induced transition between S = 0 and S = 2 spin states in solution. All six compounds undergo spin-crossover in solution with T 1/2 above room temperature (300–368 K). While structural analysis by X-ray crystallography shows that the majority of these compounds are low-spin in the solid state (and remain unchanged upon heating), we find that packing effects can override this preference and give rise to either rigorously high-spin ( 6 ) or gradual spin-crossover behavior ( 5 ) also in the solid state. Density functional theory calculations are used to delineate the empirical trends in solution spin-crossover thermodynamics. In all cases, the stabilization of the low-spin state is due to the π-acceptor properties of the formazanate ligand, resulting in an “inverted” ligand field, with an approximate “two-over-three” splitting of the d-orbitals and a high degree of metal–ligand covalency due to metal → ligand π-backdonation. The computational data indicate that the electronic nature of the para -substituent has a different influence depending on whether it is present at the C–Ar or N–Ar rings, which is ascribed to the opposing effect on metal–ligand σ- and π-bonding.
The synthesis of mono(formazanate) iron complexes is described. In the presence of tetrabutylammonium halides, salt metathesis reactions afford the ferrate(ii) complexes [Bu4N][LFeX2] (L = PhNNC(p-tol)NNPh; X = Cl, Br) in good yield, and the products are characterized in detail. The high-spin ferrate(ii) complexes show cyclic voltammograms that are consistent with reversible, ligand-based one-electron reduction. The halides in these ferrate(ii) compounds are labile, and are displaced by 4-methoxyphenyl isocyanide (4 equiv.) as evidenced by formation of the low-spin, cationic octahedral complex [LFe(CNC6H4(p-OMe))4][Br]. Thus, a straightforward route to mono(formazanate) iron(ii) complexes is established.
Bis(formazanate)iron(II) complexes undergo a thermally induced S = 0 to S = 2 spin transition in solution. Here we present a study of how steric effects and π-stacking interactions between the triarylformazanate ligands affect the spin-crossover behavior, in addition to electronic substituent effects. Moreover, the effect of increasing the denticity of the formazanate ligands is explored by including additional OMe donors in the ligand ( 7 ). In total, six new compounds ( 2 – 7 ) have been synthesized and characterized, both in solution and in the solid state, via spectroscopic, magnetic, and structural analyses. The series spans a broad range of spin-crossover temperatures ( T 1/2 ) for the LS ⇌ HS equilibrium in solution, with the exception of compound 6 which remains high-spin ( S = 2) down to 210 K. In the solid state, 6 was shown to exist in two distinct forms: a tetrahedral high-spin complex ( 6a , S = 2) and a rare square-planar structure with an intermediate-spin state ( 6b , S = 1). SQUID measurements, 57 Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy, and differential scanning calorimetry indicate that in the solid state the square-planar form 6b undergoes an incomplete spin-change-coupled isomerization to tetrahedral 6a . The complex that contains additional OMe donors ( 7 ) results in a six-coordinate (NNO) 2 Fe coordination geometry, which shifts the spin-crossover to significantly higher temperatures ( T 1/2 = 444 K). The available experimental and computational data for 7 suggest that the Fe···OMe interaction is retained upon spin-crossover. Despite the difference in coordination environment, the weak OMe donors do not significantly alter the electronic structure or ligand-field splitting, and the occurrence of spin-crossover (similar to the compounds lacking the OMe groups) originates from a large degree of metal–ligand π-covalency.
Palladium(ii) complexes with a bidentate, anionic formazanate ligand are described. Attempts to prepare mono(formazanate) palladium alkyl complexes often leads to the homoleptic bis(formazanate) complex, which shows rich electrochemistry due to the redox-active nature of the ligands. Performing salt metathesis between the precursor [Pd(COD)(CH3)Cl] and the potassium salt of the ligand in the presence of tetrabutylammonium chloride yields a square planar mono(formazanate) palladate complex through coordination of chloride anion. Ligand exchange allows binding of unsaturated molecules and evaluation of the reactivity of the Pd-CH3 fragment. Using this approach, insertion reactions of CO, isocyanide and methyl acrylate into the Pd-CH3 bond are demonstrated.
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