Size Matters: From Two-Dimensional AuI -TlI Metallopolymers to Molecular Complexes by Simple Variation of the Steric Demand

Chemistry. 2019 Mar 12;25(15):3799-3808. doi: 10.1002/chem.201805984. Epub 2019 Feb 18.

Abstract

Bis(acetylido) aurates(I) and thallium(I) trifluoromethylsulfonates were used to synthesize AuI -TlI metallopolymers, displaying novel and unusual structural motifs of the metal-metal backbones in the solid state: a discrete molecular cluster, 1D chains of interconnected dimers, tetramers, or dodecamers of Au-Tl units, and a 2D-plane network, consisting of alternating edge-linked (AuTl)6 and (AuTl)4 cycles. The formation of the different architectures was primarily controlled by the steric demand of the acetylide-substituent groups. Thus, the bulkiest 2,6-diisopropylphenyl derivative yielded a molecular cluster [Tl2 Au3 ]. Most compounds showed bright visible photoluminescence with quantum yields of up to 25 % at ambient temperature. The color of the emitted light significantly differs with the network structure. Furthermore, theoretical studies of singlet excitations in the molecular cluster, as well as NMR and mass-spectrometric investigations of the fragmentation of the metallopolymers in solution are described in detail.

Keywords: dimensional control; gold; luminescence; metallophilicity; thallium.