4.7 Article

Metal-organophosphine and metal-organophosphonium frameworks with layered honeycomb-like structures

Journal

DALTON TRANSACTIONS
Volume -, Issue 13, Pages 2298-2305

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/b820038f

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Prof. Brian F. G. Johnson

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Phosphanotriylbenzenecarboxylic acid (ptbcH(3); P(C6H4-p-CO2H)(3)) and its methyl phosphonium iodide derivative (mptbcH(3)I; {H3CP(C6H4-p-CO2H)(3)}I) have been used as organic building blocks in reaction with Zn(II) salts to obtain a series of related two-dimensional coordination polymers with honeycomb-like networks. The variable coordination number and oxidation states available to phosphorus have been exploited to produce a family of related phosphine coordination materials (PCMs) using a single ligand precursor. The phosphine carboxylate trianion, ptbc(3-), reacted with Zn(II) to form 3,3-connected undulating hexagonal sheets based on tetrahedral P and Zn nodes, where Zn-ptbc = 1 : 1. When hydroxide was used as an additional framework ligand, Zn-4(OH)(2) clusters were obtained. The clusters support 6,3-connected bilayers that consist of pairs of fused hexagonal sheets (Zn-ptbc = 2 : 1) with intra-layer pore spaces. The Zn-4(OH)(2) clusters are also coordinated by solvent, which was preferentially displaced when the bilayer material was synthesized in the presence of ethylene diamine. Treatment of ptbc(3-) with MeI resulted in methylation of the phosphine to give the P(V) phosphonium iodide salt derivative. The formally dianionic methylphosphonium tricarboxylate building block, mptbc(2-), has the same trigonal-pyramidal bridging geometry as the parent phosphine. However, mptbc(2-) reacted with Zn(II) on a 1 : 1 stoichiometric ratio to give an unusual trilayer sheet polymer that is based exclusively on 3-connected nodes. Solid-state P-31 NMR studies confirmed that the phosphine ligands were resistant to oxidation upon solvothermal reaction under aerobic conditions.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available