| Literature DB >> 34123132 |
Charles J McMonagle1, Priyanka Comar1, Gary S Nichol1, David R Allan2, Jesús González3, José A Barreda-Argüeso3, Fernando Rodríguez3, Rafael Valiente4, Gemma F Turner5, Euan K Brechin1, Stephen A Moggach5.
Abstract
In situ single-crystal diffraction and spectroscopic techniques have been used to study a previously unreported Cu-framework bis[1-(4-pyridyl)butane-1,3-dione]copper(ii) (CuPyr-I). CuPyr-I was found to exhibit high-pressure and low-temperature phase transitions, piezochromism, negative linear compressibility, and a pressure induced Jahn-Teller switch, where the switching pressure was hydrostatic media dependent. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 34123132 PMCID: PMC8163414 DOI: 10.1039/d0sc03229h
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1Ball and stick model showing the coordination environment around the Cu2+ ion in CuPyr-I, and 3D-pore structure as viewed along the c-axis direction. The yellow sphere represents the available pore-space. Colour scheme is red: oxygen, blue: nitrogen, black: carbon, white: hydrogen and cyan: copper. The Cu2+ octahedron is illustrated in green.
Fig. 2a/b and c-axes as a function of pressure in a hydrostatic medium of FC-70 (blue triangles) and MeOH (red/black circles). The vertical line indicates the transition from CuPyr-I (red circles) to CuPyr-II (black circles) above 2.15 GPa. Errors in cell-lengths are smaller than the symbols plotted.
Fig. 3Cu–O1 (orange), Cu–N1 (blue) and Cu–O2 (green) bond lengths on increasing pressure in both FC-70 (triangles and dashed lines) and MeOH (circles and solid lines).
Fig. 4(a) UV-visible spectroscopy of CuPyr-I during compression in Fluorinert® FC-70 showing a gradual BLUE-shift in the d–d intraconfigurational band (∼700 nm) and a gradual red-shift of the absorption band assigned to LMCT (∼450 nm) with increasing pressure. (b) Gradual pressure-induced Jahn–Teller switch of the Cu2+ octahedral coordination environment in CuPyr-1 from tetragonal elongated (left, green) to rhombic compressed (right, red), causing piezochromism. Atom colouring follows previous figures.