Single-Crystal-to-Single-Crystal Cluster Transformation in a Microporous Molybdoarsenate(V)-Metalorganic Framework.
Nour DissemBeñat ArtetxeLeire San FelicesGarikoitz BeobideOscar CastilloEstibaliz Ruiz-BilbaoLuis LezamaMaría dM VivancoAmor HaddadJuan M Gutiérrez-ZorrillaPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2021)
The hybrid compound [Cu(cyclam)(H2O)2]0.5[{Cu(cyclam)}1.5{B-H2As2Mo6O26(H2O)}]·9H2O (1) (cyclam = 1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradecane) was synthesized in aqueous solution by reacting the {Cu(cyclam)}2+ complex with a mixture of heptamolybdate and an arsenate(V) source. Crystal packing of 1 exhibits a supramolecular open-framework built of discrete covalent molybdoarsenate/metalorganic units and additional [Cu(cyclam)(H2O)2]2+ cations, the stacking of which generates squarelike channels parallel to the z axis with an approximate cross section of 10 × 11 Å2 where all the hydration water molecules are hosted. Thermal evacuation of solvent molecules yields a new anhydrous crystalline phase, but compound 1 does not preserve its single-crystalline nature upon heating. However, when crystals are dehydrated under vacuum, they undergo a structural transformation that proceeds via a single-crystal-to-single-crystal pathway, leading to the anhydrous phase [{Cu(cyclam)}2(A-H2As2Mo6O26)] (2). Total dehydration results in important modifications within the inorganic cluster skeleton which reveals an unprecedented solid-state B to A isomerization of the polyoxoanion. This transition also involves changes in the CuII bonding scheme that lead to covalent cluster/metalorganic layers by retaining the open-framework nature of 1. Compound 2 adsorbs ambient moisture upon air exposure, but it does not revert back to 1, and the hydrated phase [{Cu(cyclam)}2(A-H2As2Mo6O26)]·6H2O (2h) is obtained instead. Structural variations between 1 and 2 are reflected in electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy measurements, and the permanent microporosity of 2 provides interesting functionalities to the system such as the selective adsorption of gaseous CO2 over N2.