Tetraruthenium Metallamacrocycles with Potentially Coordinating Appended Functionalities

We present four new tetraruthenium macrocycles built from two 1,4-divinylphenylene diruthenium and two isophthalic acid building blocks with peripheral, potentially mono- or tridentate donor functions attached to the isophthalic linkers. These macrocycles are characterized by multinuclear NMR spectr...

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Main Authors: Patrick Anders, Mario Robin Rapp, Michael Linseis, Rainer F. Winter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-07-01
Series:Inorganics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2304-6740/6/3/73
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spelling doaj-70cc3948551a4a9791390a3158039ecf2020-11-25T02:20:51ZengMDPI AGInorganics2304-67402018-07-01637310.3390/inorganics6030073inorganics6030073Tetraruthenium Metallamacrocycles with Potentially Coordinating Appended FunctionalitiesPatrick Anders0Mario Robin Rapp1Michael Linseis2Rainer F. Winter3Fachbereich Chemie der Universität Konstanz, Universitätsstraße 10, D-78457 Konstanz, GermanyFachbereich Chemie der Universität Konstanz, Universitätsstraße 10, D-78457 Konstanz, GermanyFachbereich Chemie der Universität Konstanz, Universitätsstraße 10, D-78457 Konstanz, GermanyFachbereich Chemie der Universität Konstanz, Universitätsstraße 10, D-78457 Konstanz, GermanyWe present four new tetraruthenium macrocycles built from two 1,4-divinylphenylene diruthenium and two isophthalic acid building blocks with peripheral, potentially mono- or tridentate donor functions attached to the isophthalic linkers. These macrocycles are characterized by multinuclear NMR spectroscopy, mass spectrometry and, in the case of the thioacetyl-appended complex 4, by X-ray crystallography. Cyclic and square wave voltammetry establish that the macrocycles can be oxidized in four consecutive redox steps that come as two pairs of two closely spaced one-electron waves. Spectroscopic changes observed during IR and UV/Vis/NIR spectroelectrochemical experiments (NIR = near infrared) show that the isophthalate linkers insulate the electroactive divinylphenylene diruthenium moieties against each other. The macrocycles exhibit nevertheless pronounced polyelectrochromism with highly intense absorptions in the Vis (2+/4+ states) and the NIR (2+ states) with extinction coefficients of up to >100,000 M−1·cm−1. The strong absorptivity enhancement with respect to the individual divinylphenylene diruthenium building blocks is attributed to conformational restrictions imposed by the macrocycle backbone. Moreover, the di- and tetracations of these macrocycles are paramagnetic as revealed by EPR spectroscopy.http://www.mdpi.com/2304-6740/6/3/73rutheniummetallamacrocycleelectrochemistryspectroelectrochemistry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick Anders
Mario Robin Rapp
Michael Linseis
Rainer F. Winter
spellingShingle Patrick Anders
Mario Robin Rapp
Michael Linseis
Rainer F. Winter
Tetraruthenium Metallamacrocycles with Potentially Coordinating Appended Functionalities
Inorganics
ruthenium
metallamacrocycle
electrochemistry
spectroelectrochemistry
author_facet Patrick Anders
Mario Robin Rapp
Michael Linseis
Rainer F. Winter
author_sort Patrick Anders
title Tetraruthenium Metallamacrocycles with Potentially Coordinating Appended Functionalities
title_short Tetraruthenium Metallamacrocycles with Potentially Coordinating Appended Functionalities
title_full Tetraruthenium Metallamacrocycles with Potentially Coordinating Appended Functionalities
title_fullStr Tetraruthenium Metallamacrocycles with Potentially Coordinating Appended Functionalities
title_full_unstemmed Tetraruthenium Metallamacrocycles with Potentially Coordinating Appended Functionalities
title_sort tetraruthenium metallamacrocycles with potentially coordinating appended functionalities
publisher MDPI AG
series Inorganics
issn 2304-6740
publishDate 2018-07-01
description We present four new tetraruthenium macrocycles built from two 1,4-divinylphenylene diruthenium and two isophthalic acid building blocks with peripheral, potentially mono- or tridentate donor functions attached to the isophthalic linkers. These macrocycles are characterized by multinuclear NMR spectroscopy, mass spectrometry and, in the case of the thioacetyl-appended complex 4, by X-ray crystallography. Cyclic and square wave voltammetry establish that the macrocycles can be oxidized in four consecutive redox steps that come as two pairs of two closely spaced one-electron waves. Spectroscopic changes observed during IR and UV/Vis/NIR spectroelectrochemical experiments (NIR = near infrared) show that the isophthalate linkers insulate the electroactive divinylphenylene diruthenium moieties against each other. The macrocycles exhibit nevertheless pronounced polyelectrochromism with highly intense absorptions in the Vis (2+/4+ states) and the NIR (2+ states) with extinction coefficients of up to >100,000 M−1·cm−1. The strong absorptivity enhancement with respect to the individual divinylphenylene diruthenium building blocks is attributed to conformational restrictions imposed by the macrocycle backbone. Moreover, the di- and tetracations of these macrocycles are paramagnetic as revealed by EPR spectroscopy.
topic ruthenium
metallamacrocycle
electrochemistry
spectroelectrochemistry
url http://www.mdpi.com/2304-6740/6/3/73
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AT michaellinseis tetrarutheniummetallamacrocycleswithpotentiallycoordinatingappendedfunctionalities
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