2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.crci.2005.02.035
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Skeletal isomerism in mixed transition-metal/main-group closo clusters

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…It turned out, however, that the so called 2nd hexol is of composition [Co 6 (OH) 8 (O) 2 (NH 3 ) 14 ] 6+ , thus being a chemically different species.65 For [Au 9 {P(C 6 H 4 OMep) 3 } 8 ](NO 3 ) 3 Briant et al66 have reported two different crystalline modifications as the first example of skeletal isomerism in metal cluster chemistry. More recent examples for skeletal isomerism in mixed transition-metal/main-group closo clusters have summarised by Guechtouli et al67 For multinuclear complexes Haupt has reported on the crystallographic characterisation of several different pairs of constitutional isomers of trinuclear complexes possessing a different structural skeleton 68.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It turned out, however, that the so called 2nd hexol is of composition [Co 6 (OH) 8 (O) 2 (NH 3 ) 14 ] 6+ , thus being a chemically different species.65 For [Au 9 {P(C 6 H 4 OMep) 3 } 8 ](NO 3 ) 3 Briant et al66 have reported two different crystalline modifications as the first example of skeletal isomerism in metal cluster chemistry. More recent examples for skeletal isomerism in mixed transition-metal/main-group closo clusters have summarised by Guechtouli et al67 For multinuclear complexes Haupt has reported on the crystallographic characterisation of several different pairs of constitutional isomers of trinuclear complexes possessing a different structural skeleton 68.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We have shown previously that such an architecture is, in the case of E = N, particularly favored for an electron count of 6 SEPs, i.e. four less electrons than the clusters investigated in this work [15]. The case of E = NH is somewhat different.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 55%
“…Other limitations are related to skeletal isomerism as for example mixed transition/main group clusters. Indeed, there are often several ways to distribute atoms of different nature on the different vertices of the same polyhedron, leading to the possibility of different structures for the same electron count, the PSEP being unable to predict which one is the most stable [14,15]. Limitations can also occur when cluster bonding lies at the boundary between localization and delocalization.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%