Non-Porous Iron(II)-Based Sensor: Crystallographic Insights into a Cycle of Colorful Guest-Induced Topotactic Transformations.
Santiago Rodríguez-JiménezHumphrey L C FelthamSally BrookerPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2016)
Materials capable of sensing volatile guests at room temperature by an easily monitored set of outputs are of great appeal for development as chemical sensors of small volatile organics and toxic gases. Herein the dinuclear iron(II) complex, [FeII2 (L)2 (CH3 CN)4 ](BF4 )4 ⋅2 CH3 CN (1) [L=4-(4-methylphenyl)-3-(3-pyridazinyl)-5-pyridyl-4H-1,2,4-triazole], is shown to undergo reversible single-crystal-to-single-crystal (SCSC) transformations upon exposure to vapors of different guests: 1 (MeCN)⇌2 (EtOH)→3 (H2 O)⇌1 (MeCN). Whilst 1 and 2 remain dimetallic, SCSC to 3 involves conversion to a 1D polymeric chain (due to a change in L bridging mode), which, remarkably, can undergo SCSC de-polymerization, reforming dimetallic 1. Additionally, SC-XRD studies of two ordered transient forms, 1TF3 and 2TF3, confirm that guest exchange occurs by diffusion of the new guests into the non-porous lattices as the old guests leave. These reversible SCSC events also induce color and magnetic responses. Indeed dark red 1 is spin crossover active (T1/2 ↓ 356 K; T1/2 ↑ 369 K), whilst orange 2 and yellow 3 remain high spin.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- ionic liquid
- lymph node metastasis
- high glucose
- gas chromatography
- metal organic framework
- diabetic rats
- iron deficiency
- open label
- water soluble
- mass spectrometry
- randomized controlled trial
- oxidative stress
- squamous cell carcinoma
- tissue engineering
- low cost
- solid state
- endothelial cells
- study protocol
- case control
- molecular dynamics
- placebo controlled
- stress induced