화학공학소재연구정보센터
Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.39, No.7, 1444-1453, 2000
Formation and dissociation kinetics and crystal structures of nickel(II)-macrocyclic tetrathiaether complexes in acetonitrile. Comparison to nickel(II)-macrocyclic tetramines
Complex formation and dissociation rate constants have been independently determined for solvated nickel(II) ion reacting with eight macrocyclic tetrathiaether ligands and one acyclic analogue in acetonitrile at 25 degrees C, mu = 0.15 M. The macrocyclic ligands include 1,4,8,11-tetrathiacyclotetradecane ([14]aneS(4)) and seven derivatives in which one or both ethylene bridges have been substituted by cis- or trans-1,2-cyclohexane, while the acyclic ligand is 2,5,9,12-tetrathiatridecane (Mez-2,3,2-S-4). In contrast to similar complex formation kinetic studies an Ni(II) reacting with corresponding macrocyclic tetramines in acetonitrile and N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF), the kinetics of complex formation with the macrocyclic tetrathiaethers show no evidence of slow conformational changes following the initial coordination process. The differing behavior is ascribed to the fact that such conformational changes require donor atom inversion, which is readily accommodated by thiaether sulfurs but requires abstraction of a hydrogen from a nitrogen (to form a temporary amide), The latter process is nor facilitated in solvents of low protophilicity. The rate-determining step in the formation reactions appears to be at the point of first-bond formation for the acyclic tetrathiaether but shifts to the point of chelate ring closure (i.e., second-bond formation) for the macrocyclic tetrathiaether complexes. The formation rate constants for Ni(II) with the macrocyclic tetrathiaethers parallel those previously obtained for Cu(II) reacting with the same ligands in 80%. methanol-20% water (w/w). By contrast, the Ni(II) dissociation rate constants show significant variations from the trends in the Cu(II) behavior. Crystal. structures are reported for the Ni(II) complexes formed with all five dicyclohexanediyl-substituted macrocyclic tetrathiaethers. All but one are low-spin species.