Solution chemistry in non-co-ordinating solvents (CH2Cl2, CHCl3) of nickel(II) and nickel(III) complexes of the lipophilic macrocycle 1-hexadecyl-1,4,8,11-tetra-azacyclotetradecane. The emphasized role of the anion co-ordination
Abstract
Nickel(II) complexes of the lipophilic tetramine macrocycle N-cetylcyclam (1-hexadecyl-1,4,8,11-tetra-azacyclotetradecane) L1, dissolve in non-co-ordinating solvents such as CH2Cl2 and CHCl3 as intact Ni(L1)X2 species, whose spin state and colour depend on the co-ordinating tendencies of the apically bound X– anions: Cl–, and SCN–, blue, high-spin complexes; ClO4–, BF4–, and I–, yellow, low-spin complexes. The complex Ni(L1)Br2 exists in solution as an equilibrium mixture of the blue and yellow species and the blue-to-yellow conversion is exothermic; moreover, the equilibrium is displaced to the right on further addition of the background electrolyte, tetra-alkylammonium or tetraethylphosphonium bromide. A general model is proposed to explain the thermodynamic aspects of the high-spin/low-spin interconversion in both co-ordinating (e.g. water) and non-co-ordinating media. Finally, NiII(L1)X2 complexes in CH2Cl2 solution (0.1 mol dm–3 Bun4NX), undergo reversible one-electron oxidation processes to give a [NiIII(L1)X2]X species. The NiIII–NiII redox potential decreases dramatically with increasing co-ordinating tendency of the X– ions. This permits us to obtain a spectrochemical series for electrochemically inert inorganic anions. On this basis, it appears that ClO4– is a more strongly co-ordinating ligand than BF4–.