| Literature DB >> 21223587 |
Hussein S Seleem1, Gaber A El-Inany, Bashir A El-Shetary, Marwa A Mousa.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The heterocyclic hydrazones constitute an important class of biologically active drug molecules. The hydrazones have also been used as herbicides, insecticides, nematocides, redenticides, and plant growth regulators as well as plasticizers and stabilizers for polymers. The importance of the phenolic quinolyl hydrazones arises from incorporating the quinoline ring with the phenolic compound; 2,4-dihydroxy benzaldehyde. Quinoline ring has therapeutic and biological activities whereas, phenols have antiseptic and disinfectants activities and are used in the preparation of dyes, bakelite and drugs. The present study is planned to check the effect of the counter anions on the type and geometry of the isolated copper(II)- complexes as well as the ligational behavior of the phenolic hydrazone; 4-[(2-(4,8-dimethylquinolin-2-yl)hydrazono)methyl] benzene-1,3-diol; (H2L). <br> RESULTS: A phenolic quinolyl hydrazone (H2L) was allowed to react with various copper(II)- salts (Cl‾, Br‾, NO3‾, ClO4‾, AcO‾, SO42-). The reactions afforded dimeric complexes (ClO4‾, AcO‾ ), a binuclear complex (NO3‾ ) and mononuclear complexes (the others; Cl‾, Br‾, SO42-). The isolated copper(II)- complexes have octahedral, square pyramid and square planar geometries. Also, they reflect the strong coordinating ability of NO3‾, Cl‾, Br‾, AcO‾ and SO42- anions. Depending on the type of the anion, the ligand showed three different modes of bonding viz. (NN)0 for the mononuclear complexes (3, 4, 6), (NO)- with O- bridging for the dimeric complexes (1, 5) and a mixed mode [(NN)0 + (NO)- with O- bridging] for the binuclear nitrato- complex (2). <br> CONCLUSION: The ligational behavior of the phenolic hydrazone (H2L) is highly affected by the type of the anion. The isolated copper(II)- complexes reflect the strong coordinating power of the SO42-, AcO‾, Br‾, Cl‾ and NO3‾ anions. Also, they reflect the structural diversity (octahedral, square pyramid and square planar) depending on the type of the counter anion.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21223587 PMCID: PMC3033234 DOI: 10.1186/1752-153X-5-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Cent J ISSN: 1752-153X Impact factor: 4.215
Analytical and physical data of the copper(II)- phenolic complexes.
| No. | Complex | Color | % | m.p. | Elemental analysis; % Found/(Calcd.) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C | H | N | M | |||||
| (H2L); C18H17N3O2 | Yellow | 64 | 260 | 70.50 | 5.68 | 13.66 | ---- | |
| [Cu(HL)(H2O)2]2 (ClO4)2. 1/2H2O.¼MeOH | Dark | 49 | 145 | 42.29 | 4.26 | 8.13 | 12.35 | |
| [Cu2(HL)2(H2L)(NO3)2].1¼H2O.2¾MeOH | Greenish | 24 | >300 | 53.12 | 5.02 | 12.02 | 9.95 | |
| [Cu (H2L) (H2O)2 Cl2]. 1⅛ H2O | Dark | 30 | >300 | 43.44 | 4.73 | 8.48 | 12.75 | |
| [Cu (H2L) (H2O) Br2].1/2 H2O | Chocolate | 34 | 247 | 38.73 | 3.68 | 7.76 | 11.36 | |
| [Cu (HL) (OAc)]2.MeOH | Greenish | 53 | >300 | 55.26 | 4.77 | 9.51 | 14.30 | |
| [Cu(H2L)(H2O)2 SO4].2¼H2O | Dark | 14 | >300 | 39.85 | 4.76 | 7.85 | 11.71 | |
Magnetic, conductivity, electronic and IR spectral data for the copper(II)- phenolic complexes.
| Complex | λ (nm) | Conductance | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ν (OH) | ν (C = N) | Others | ||||
| H2L | 266, 320, 371 | ----- | ----- | 3426 | 1603 | ------ |
| 285, 348, 461 | 1.47 | 175.0 | 3422 | 1623 | ν (ClO); 1094 | |
| 276, 346, 435, 460, 485 | 1.40 | 27.0 | 3423 | 1641 | ν (NO); 1394 | |
| 279, 348, 375, 438 | 1.95 | 40 | 3396 | 1613 | ------ | |
| 279, 352, 381, 488 | 1.77 | 32.0 | 3396 | 1622 | ------ | |
| 269, 346, 429, 458 | 1.33 | 9.2 | 3385 | 1612 | ν (C = O); 1635 | |
| 268, 287, 371, 436, 460, 485 | 2.01 | 16.3 | 3385 | 1620 | ν3 (SO); 1109 | |
Scheme 1Mass fragmentation pattern of the HL ligand.
Figure 1HNMR spectrum of the phenolic hydrazone; δ = 7.05-7.73 for aromatic protons (7H).
Scheme 2Anion effect on copper (II)- phenolic complexes.
Figure 2Overlay of the electronic spectra of copper (II) - phenolic complexes.
Figure 3The X- band ESR spectrum of complex .
Thermal behavior of the copper(II)- phenolic complexes.
| No. | Complex (F.W.) | Temperature | % Wt. loss | Lost molecules; | Probable residue |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [Cu(HL)(H2O)2]2(ClO4)2.1/2H2O.¼MeOH | 43-241 | 94.13 | * Decomp. in one step; | Metallic Cu; | |
| [Cu2(HL)2(H2L)(NO3)2].1¼H2O.2¾MeOH | 46-105 | 2.23 (2.22) | * ¾ MeOH + ¼ H2O | ||
| 106-272 | 17.07 (16.23) | * 2 MeOH + H2O + 2HNO3 | (CuO)2; | ||
| 272-430 | 51.68 | * Decomp. | |||
| 430-587 | 15.75 | ||||
| 32-292 | 9.54 (11.3) | * 3⅛ H2O with decomp. | |||
| [Cu (H2Lc) (H2O)2 Cl2]. 1⅛ H2O | 293-797 | 42.06 | (Cu2O + CuO); | ||
| 44-254 | 12.69 31.00 | * Two overlapped steps; | |||
| [Cu(H2L)(H2O)Br2].1/2H2O | 254-434 | 18.28 (33.8) | * 11/2 H2O + 2HBr | (Cu2O + Cu); | |
| 434-800 | 35.00 | → Decomp. | |||
| 29-268 | 13.16 (13.48) | * 2 AcOH | |||
| [Cu(HL)(OAc)]2. MeOH | 269-676 | 66.94 | * MeOH with decomp. | (Cu2O + Cu); | |
| 28-145 | 18.39 (7.45) | * 2¼ H2O | |||
| [Cu(H2L)(H2O)2 SO4].2¼H2O | 146-409 | 19.01(18.03) | * H2SO4 | (Cu2O + CuO); | |
| 409-797 | 32.42 | * 2 H2O with decomp. | |||
Thermodynamic and kinetic parametersa of copper(II)- phenolic complexes.
| Complex | Stage | T (K) | E* | ΔH* | ΔG* | -ΔS* | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 501 | 2.449 | 6.964 | 2.805 | 37.564 | 69.378 | |
| 1 | 348 | 1.368 | 5.786 | 2.898 | 27.671 | 71.187 | |
| 2 | 500 | 5.509 | 9.112 | 4.962 | 36.277 | 62.63 | |
| 3 | 626 | 35.499 | 15.451 | 10.256 | 40.948 | 49.029 | |
| 1 | 470 | 3.248 | 7.653 | 3.752 | 35.009 | 66.503 | |
| 1 | 342 | 1.482 | 5.92 | 3.081 | 27.151 | 70.38 | |
| 2 | 624 | 8.766 | 10.57 | 5.391 | 43.214 | 60.614 | |
a E*, ΔH* and ΔG* are in k J mol-1 while ΔS* is in J mol-1 K-1.
Scheme 3Proposed structures of the nitrato complex (.