Ligand Modifications Produce Two-Step Magnetic Switching in a Cobalt(dioxolene) Complex

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2023 Nov 6;62(45):e202311790. doi: 10.1002/anie.202311790. Epub 2023 Oct 2.

Abstract

Mononuclear monodioxolene valence tautomeric (VT) cobalt complexes typically exist in their low spin (l.s.) CoIII (cat2- ) and high spin (h.s.) CoII (sq⋅- ) forms (cat2- =catecholato, and sq⋅- =seminquinonato forms of 3,5-di-t Bu-1,2-dioxolene), which reversibly interconvert via temperature-dependent intramolecular electron transfer. Typically, the remaining four coordination sites on cobalt are supported by a tetradentate ligand whose properties influence the temperature at which VT occurs. We report that replacing one chelating pyridyl arm of tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine (tpa) with a weaker field ortho-anisole moiety facilitates access to a third magnetic state, and examine a series of related complexes. Variable temperature crystallographic, magnetic, calorimetric, and spectroscopic studies support that this third state is consistent with l.s. CoII (sq⋅- ). Thus, our ligand modifications not only provide access to the VT transition from l.s. CoIII (cat2- ) to l.s. CoII (sq⋅- ), but at higher temperatures, the complex undergoes spin crossover from l.s. CoII (sq⋅- ) to h.s. CoII (sq⋅- ), representing the first example of two-step magnetic switching in a mononuclear monodioxolene cobalt complex. We hypothesize that ligand dynamicity may facilitate access to the rarely observed l.s. CoII (sq⋅- ) intermediate state, suggesting a new design criterion in the development of stimulus-responsive multi-state molecular switches.

Keywords: Cobalt Dioxolene; Molecular Switch; Spin Crossover; Valence Tautomerism.