Literature DB >> 12643725

Complexity of coordinative bonding in thallium(I) anthranilates and salicylates.

Frank Wiesbrock1, Hubert Schmidbaur.   

Abstract

An inventory of the structural chemistry of thallium(I) shows many unexpected, almost random coordination numbers and coordination geometries that appear erratic and inconsistent. This nonstandard behavior is often ascribed to the specific lone-pair characteristics originating from relativistic effects. To provide data on a set of closely related compounds from which simple general rules of coordinative bonding at Tl(+) can be established, three thallium(I) anthranilates and three thallium(I) salicylates have been prepared from Tl(2)CO(3) and the corresponding 2-amino- and 2-hydroxy-benzoic acids and crystallized from aqueous solutions. All six compounds, the simple anthranilate (1) and salicylate (4) and the 3- and 4-methyl-substituted homologues (2, 3 and 5, 6) show different structures with large variations in the coordination motif. The coordination by oxygen in a geometry which covers less than a coordination hemisphere is the only common feature, complemented (only in 1) by a nitrogen coordination and by eta(6)-coordination of one (in 1, 2, 3, 6) or two phenyl rings (in 4). Tl-Tl contacts for which "thallophilic" bonding between closed shell metal atoms could be invoked, are generally very long (close to 4.0 A) or even well beyond the limit of standard van der Waals contacts. Hydrogen bonding is only obvious for the internal contacts of the amino- or hydroxy-benzoate ligands and does not contribute significantly to the assembly of the supramolecular structure which is dominated by oxygen bridges between thallium atoms. With the exception of 5, the formula units Tl[O(2)C(2-R)(3-R')(4-R'')C(6)H(2)] are generally aggregated into dimers of various configurations depending on the relative orientation of the edge-sharing four-membered rings, and these dimers are further linked into strings or columns establishing N-Tl or Tl-O contacts and arene coordination. The drastic changes induced in the structures upon only small variations such as methyl substitution in 3- or 4-position of the ligand suggest that thallium(I) coordination is generally restricted to one hemisphere of nearest neighbors, but is extremely flexible in this realm. The open hemisphere may be partially capped by arene coordination (which is weak at a distance of ca. 3.1 A to the centroid of the ring) or feature very weak thallophilic contacts.

Entities:  

Year:  2003        PMID: 12643725     DOI: 10.1021/ja0287783

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Chem Soc        ISSN: 0002-7863            Impact factor:   15.419


  3 in total

1.  Benzannulated tris(2-mercapto-1-imidazolyl)hydroborato ligands: tetradentate κ4-S3H binding and access to monomeric monovalent thallium in an [S3] coordination environment.

Authors:  Yi Rong; Joshua H Palmer; Gerard Parkin
Journal:  Dalton Trans       Date:  2013-11-08       Impact factor: 4.390

2.  The Role of Prussian Blue-Thallium and Potassium Similarities and Differences in Crystal Structures of Selected Cyanido Complexes of W, Fe and Mo.

Authors:  Maciej Hodorowicz; Janusz Szklarzewicz; Anna Jurowska
Journal:  Materials (Basel)       Date:  2022-06-29       Impact factor: 3.748

3.  Crystal structure of poly[(μ3-4-amino-1,2,5-oxa-diazole-3-hydroxamato)thallium(I)].

Authors:  Inna S Safyanova; Oksana A Bondar; Anna V Pavlishchuk; Iryna V Omelchenko; Turganbay S Iskenderov; Valentina A Kalibabchuk
Journal:  Acta Crystallogr E Crystallogr Commun       Date:  2020-02-11
  3 in total

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