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123
Hexagonal:
C2v
C2v
D2h
Hexagonal pyramidal:
Cs
Cs
C2v
Trigonal prismatic:
Cs
C2v
C2
Trigonal antiprismatic:
Cs
C2
C2h
a.
dicyanotetrakis(methylisocyano)iron(II) or dicyanotetrakis(methylisocyano)iron(0)
b.
c.
cis- and trans-carbonylchlorobis(triphenylphosphine)iridium(I) or cis- and transcarbon
ylchlorobis(triphenylphospine)iridium(0)
9.3
d.
e.
a.
tris(oxalato)vanadate(III) or tris(oxalato)vanadate(3)
b.
c.
carbonatobis(ethylenediamine)cobalt(III) chloride or
carbonatobis(ethy
lenediamine)cobalt(1+) chloride
9.4
d.
e.
a.
tetraamminecopper(II) or tetraamminecopper(2+)
b.
tetrachloroplatinate(II) or tetrachloroplatinate(2)
c.
tris(dimethyldithiocarbamato)iron(III) or tris(dimethyldithiocarbamato)iron(0)
d.
hexacyanomanganate(II) or hexacyanomanganate(4)
e.
124
9.5
triamminetrichloroplatinum(IV) or triamminetrichloroplatinum(1+)
b.
diamminediaquadichlorocobalt(III) or diamminediaquadichlorocobalt(1+)
c.
diamminediaquabromochlorocobalt(III) or diamminediaquabromochlorocobalt(1+)
d.
triaquabromochloroiodochromium(III) or triaquabromochloroiodochromium(0)
e.
or
dichlorobis(ethylenediamine)platinum(IV) or dichlorobis(ethylenediamine)platinum(2+)
dichlorobis(1,2-ethanediamine)platinum(IV) or dichlorobis(1,2ethanediamine)platinum(2+)
f.
diamminedichloro(o-phenanthroline)chromium(III) or diamminedichloro(ophenanthroline)chro
mium(1+) or diamminedichloro(1,10-phenanthroline)chromium(III)
or
diamminedichloro(1,10-phenanthroline)chromium(1+)
g.
or
bis(2,2-bipyridine)bromochloroplatinum(IV) or bis(2,2bypyridine)bromochloroplatinum(2+)
bis(2,2-bipyridyl)bromochloroplatinum(IV) or bis(2,2bipyridyl)bromochloroplatinum(2+)
h.
dibromo[o-phenylene(dimethylarsine)(dimethylphosphine)]rhenium(II) or
dibrom
o[o-phenylene(dimethylarsine)(dimethylphosphine)]rhenium(0) or
dibrom
o[1,2-phenylene(dimethylarsine)(dimethylphosphine)]rhenium(II) or
dibrom
o[1,2-phenylene(dimethylarsine)(dimethylphosphine)]rhenium(0)
i.
dibromochlorodiethylenetriaminerhenium(III) or
dibrom
ochlorodiethylenetriaminerhenium(0) or dibromochloro(2,2diam
inodiethylamine)rhenium(III) or dibromochloro(2,2diam
inodiethylamine)rhenium(0)
9.6
9.7
a.
dicarbonylbis(dimethyldithiocarbamato)ruthenium(III) or
dicarbonylbis(dimethyldithiocarbamato)ruthenium(1+)
b.
trisoxalatocobaltate(III) or trisoxalatocobaltate(3)
c.
tris(ethylenediamine)ruthenium(II) or tris(ethylenediamine)ruthenium(2+)
d.
bis(2,2-bipyridine)dichloronickel(II) or bis(2,2-bipyridine)dichloronickel(2+)
a.
Bis(en)Co(III)--amido--hydroxobis(en)Co(III)
N
N
Co
N
4+
N
H2
N
O
H
Co
N
N
125
Diaquadiiododinitritopalladium(IV)
I
ONO
H2O
Pd
H2O
ONO
ONO
ONO
H 2O
I
OH2
ONO
OH2
H 2O
OH2
I
ONO
I
I
I
Pd
ONO
ONO
Pd
H 2O
Pd
Pd
ONO
OH2
ONO
ONO
OH2
Pd
ONO
OH2
H2O
enantiomers
c.
Fe(dtc)3
S
S
S
Fe
Fe
S
S
S
=
S
S
CH3
At low temperature, restricted rotation about the CN bond can lead to additional
isomers as a consequence of the different substituents on the nitrogen. These isomers can
be observed by NMR.
126
9.8
triammineaquadichlorocobalt(III) chloride
+
H2O
H3N
H 3N
Co
Cl
Cl
H3N
NH3
H3N
Co
OH2
H2O
NH3
Cl
Co
Cl
Cl
Cl
cis
trans
mer
b.
H3N
Cr
NH3
H3N
4+
NH3
H3N H3N
H3N
c.
fac
-oxo-bis(pentammine-chromium(III)) ion
Cr
NH3
NH3
NH3
potassium diaquabis(oxalato)manganate(III)
O
O
H2O
Mn
H2O
Mn
H2O
OH2
OH2
H2O
trans
Cl
a.
Mn
cis enantiomers
9.9
NH3
cis-diamminebromochloroplatinum(II)
Pt
Br
NH3
I
b.
diaquadiiododinitritopalladium(IV)
H2O
Pt
ONO
ONO
OH2
c.
tri--carbonylbis(tricarbonyliron(0))
O
C
O O
C C
Fe
OC
NH3
O
C CO
Fe
CC
O O
CO
NH3
NH3
9.10
C
CH2
H2 N
O
N
= N
mer
M(AB)3
B
A
mer
[Pt(NH3)3Cl3]+
a.
fac
9.12
fac
9.11
127
NH 3
Cl
Pt
Cl
Cl
NH3
H3N
NH3
Cl
NH3
Pt
NH3
Cl
Cl
fac
mer
[Co(NH3)2(H2O)2Cl2]+
b.
NH3
H 2O
Cl
Co
Cl
NH3
H 2O
OH2
H 2O
Cl
Co
NH3
Cl
NH3
Cl
OH2
Cl
Co
Co
Cl
OH2
H2 O
NH3
H 3N
NH3
H3N
Cl
Co
Co
NH3
H 2O
OH2
Cl
Cl
enantiomers
NH3
OH2
NH3
Cl
H 2O
NH3
OH2
Cl
128
c.
OH2
H 3N
H 3N
Co
Br
H 2O
Cl
H 2O
Co
OH2
Br
Co
NH3
Br
NH3
Cl
Co
H 3N
NH3
H 3N
Cl
OH2
Cl
OH2
H2 O
H2 O
Co
Cl
Br
+
NH3
H3 N
NH3
H3N
+
OH2
Co
Cl
Br
enantiomers
d.
Br
H2O
Br
Cl
OH2
Co
NH3
OH2
OH2
Co
NH3
NH3
H2O
NH3
NH3
Br
OH2
H 2O
Cl
enantiomers
Cr(H2O)3BrClI
OH2
H2 O
H2O
OH2
Cr
Cl
H2 O
OH2
Cr
Br
Cl
Br
enantiomers
Cl
H2 O
Cr
OH2
I
H 2O
Br
Cr
OH2
Cl
Br
H2 O
OH2
Cr
Br
Cl
e.
OH2
OH2
OH2
[Pt(en)2Cl2]2+
2+
N
N
Cl
Pt
2+
Cl
Pt
N
Cl
Cl
cis enantiomers
2+
Cl
N
N
Pt
Cl
trans
N
N
f.
N
Cl
NH3
H 3N
NH3
H3N
Cr
2+
2+
Br
2+
Pt
Cl
Cl
Cl
trans Cl ligands
[Pt(bipy)2BrCl]2+
Pt
H3N
NH3
NH3
Cr
NH3
enantiomers
Cl
Cr
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cr
g.
129
Br
Br
Cl
Cl
Pt
N
N
enantiomers
h.
Re(arphos)2Br2
Br
P
As
Re
Br
P
As
As
Re
Br
Br
Re
As
Br
Br
Br
Re
Re
P
As
As
As
As
As
As
Br
Br
Br
Br
Br
As
As
Re
As
As
Re
P
As
P
As
Re
P
Br
Br
Br
Br
130
Re(dien)Br2Cl
Cl
N
Re
Br
Cl
Br
Br
Br
Br
Re
Br
Cl
Re
Cl
Br
Re
Br
9.13
Br
Cl
Re
Br
a. M(ABA)(CDC)
C
A
b. M(ABA)(CDE)
C
A
B
C
D
C
D
A
M
M
E
M
E
C
D
C
D
C
D
C
D
131
9.14
A
A
C
B
A
B
9.15
A
B
A
M
A
B
A
B
a. The softer phosphorus atom bonds preferentially to the soft metal Pd (see Section 6.6.1).
b, c. Abbreviating the bidentate ligands N P :
Cl
P
N
Ni
Cl
P
Ni
Cl
Cl
Ni
Cl
Cl
Cl
N
Cl
Ni
N
P
Ni
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Ni
Ni
Ni
P
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
132
9.16
a, b.
N
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
N
P
P
N
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
9.17
C
O
C
Br
Co
C
N
C
Br
There are 18 isomers overall, six with the chelating ligand in a mer geometry and 12 with
the chelating ligand in a fac geometry. All are enantiomers. They are all shown below, with
dashed lines separating the enantiomers.
N
P
As
Br
Br
OH2
H2O
N
P
As
As
Br
Br
NH3
H 3N
N
P
OH2
Br
H2O
Br
As
As
H3 N
NH3
Br
Br
As
H 2O
NH3
H3N
OH2
Br
Br
NH3
NH3
OH2
OH2
NH3
NH3
N
OH2
H2O
As
Br
As
1. Mo
2.
Mo
OH2
Cs
S
Mo
S
Mo
Mo
Cr
W
Mo
Mo
O
Cr
C1
Se
C1
O
S
Mo
Mo
Cr
W
Se
C1
O
Mo
Cr
W
Se
Se
Mo
C1
O
O
Mo
Cr
C1
Se
Cs
C1
Mo
Mo
Mo
Cr
Se
Mo
Mo
Mo
Mo
Se
Cr
O
Se
O
W
C1
Mo
Cr
C1
M
OH2
S
Mo
N
Br
O
W
Mo
Mo
3.
Mo
N
Br
Mo
As
Cs C3v
S
Mo
d.
Mo
Mo
c.
As
Br
Br
b.
H3N
NH3
a, b.
As
OH2
OH2
9.22
NH3
NH3
9.21
H2 O
Br
9.20
H3N
Br
a.
NH 3
OH2
OH2
9.19
As
OH2
Br
As
NH3
As
NH3
As
133
P
As
P
As
P
As
134
S
Mo
Mo
Mo
Cr
9.23
Se
O
Mo
Se
W
O
O
Cs Cs
c.
Yes, provided the structure has no symmetry or only Cn axes. Examples are the
structures with C1 symmetry in part a.
Cr
The 19F doublet is from the two axial fluorines (split by the equatorial fluorine).
The 19F triplet is from the equatorial fluorine (split by the two axial fluorines).
The two doubly bonded oxygens are equatorial, as expected from VSEPR
considerations. Point group: C2v
9.24
F
O
O
Os
[Cu(CN)2] :
NCCuCN
NCCuCNCuCN
NCCuCNCuCNCuCN
[Cu2(CN)3] :
[Cu3(CN)4] :
+
[Cu2(CN)] :
CuCNCu
CuCNCuCNCu
CuCNCuNCCuCNCu
[Cu3(CN)2] :
[Cu4(CN)3] :
Where 2-coordinate copper appears in these ions, the geometry around the Cu is linear, as
expected from VSEPR.
9.25
The bulky mesityl groups cause sufficient crowding that the phosphine ligands can show
HC
chirality (C3 symmetry) and can be considered as similar to left-handed (PL) and
right-handed (PR) propellers. If two P(mesityl)3 phosphines are attached in a
linear arrangement to a gold atom, three isomers are possible:
3
PLAuPL
PRAuPR
PLAuPR
H 3C
mesityl
(PRAuPL is equivalent to PLAuPR, as can best be seen with models.) NMR data
at low temperature support the presence of these isomers, which interconvert at higher
temperatures.
CH3
A1
E
A2
E
E
9
1
2
1
2
2C3
0
1
1
1
1
3C2
1
1
0
1
0
2S3
0
1
1
1
1
h
3
1
2
1
2
3v
3
0
0
1
0
Re
z2
(x, y), (x2y2, xy)
z
(xz, yz)
135
= H
NN
NN
O Cr O
O Cr O
O Cr O
O
Mn O
O
O
OO
OO
OO
OO
O Mn O
O
O
O
O
OO
OO
OO
O Mn O
O
O
O
O
O
O Mn
O
OO
O Cr O
O Cr O
O Cr O
NN
NN
NN
9.28
N
N
N
N
O
O
O
O
N
N
Co
O O
N
Co
O O
Co
O
O
O
N
N
N
O
O
N
Co
N
O
O
O
O O
N
Co
O O
N
Co
O
O
N
136
9.29
9.30
Cu(acacCN)2: D2h
b.
C6
tpt: C2v
All four metal-organic frameworks studied (MOF-177, Co(BDP), Cu-BTTri, Mg 2 (dobdc) ) are
significantly more effective at adsorbing carbon dioxide relative to adsorbing hydrogen. This is
attributed, in part, to the higher polarizability of CO 2 relative to that of H 2 . The formation of an
induced dipole in these gases by exposed cations within MOFs is an important prerequisite for
adsorption. The two MOF properties that most strongly correlate with CO 2 adsorption capacity
are MOF surface area and MOF accessible pore volume. As these values (tabulated below)
increase, the CO 2 adsorption capacity increases.
MOF
Surface Area ( m2 g )
MOF-177
4690
1.59
Co(BDP)
2030
0.93
Cu-BTTri
1750
0.713
Mg 2 (dobdc)
1800
0.573
The graphs in Figure 1 of the reference clearly indicate that Mg 2 (dobdc) adsorbs the most CO 2
at 5 bar. The arrangement and concentration of open Mg 2+ cation sites on the Mg 2 (dobdc)
surface is hypothesized to render this MOF more susceptible to CO 2 adsorption. This MOF,
along with Cu-BTTri, which also features exposed metal sites, are identified as the best prospects
for CO 2 H 2 separation.
9.31
The synthesis and application of amine-functionalized MOFs for CO 2 adsorption is the general
topic of the reference. While the M 2 (dobdc) series of MOFs were proposed as excellent
candidates for this functionalization (on the basis of their relatively large concentration of
exposed metal cation sites), their amine-functionalization proved difficult. This was attributed to
the relatively narrow MOF channels that may hinder amine diffusion into M 2 (dobdc) .
One hypothesized solution was to prepare a MOF with the M 2 (dobdc) structure-type, but with
larger pores. The wider linker dobpdc (below, along with dobdc for comparison) was used in the
hope of obtaining MOFs with larger pores.
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
dobdc
dobpdc
137
filtration after cooling. Dried samples of Mg 2 (dobpdc) were then heated for roughly one hour at
420 C under dynamic vacuum. After this activation step, Mg 2 (dobpdc) was stirred with an
excess of N,N-dimethylethylenediamine (mmen) in hexanes for one day. Subsequent heating
under vacuum resulted in removal of residual solvents to afford mmen-functionalized
Mg 2 (dobpdc) . The activation step was found necessary to completely remove residual N,Ndiethylformamide from the Mg 2+ coordination sites.
9.32
This reference discusses application of porphyrin-containing MOFs where the porphyrin provides
a binding site for Fe(III) and Cu(II). The precursor to the porphyrin linker (TCPP) is provided
below; the resulting carboxylates of this linker permit its incorporation into the MOF.
HOOC
COOH
N
H
N
N
H
N
HOOC
COOH