inorganic compounds
The dehydrated copper silicate Na2[Cu2Si4O11]: a three-dimensional microporous framework with a linear Si—O—Si linkage
aDepartment of Chemistry, University of Aveiro, CICECO, 3810-193 Aveiro, Portugal
*Correspondence e-mail: filipe.paz@ua.pt
The structure of the title dehydrated copper silicate, disodium dicopper undecaoxide tetrasilicate, Na2(Cu2O11Si4), was determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction from a non-merohedral twin. It exhibits an effective three-dimensional microporous framework with the major channels, in which the Na+ cations are placed, running along the a-axis direction and smaller channels observed along the b-axis direction. The structure is unusual in that it contains a symmetry-constrained Si—O—Si angle of 180°. The Cu centre is coordinated to five O atoms, exhibiting a slightly distorted square-pyramidal coordination geometry. The Na cation is interacting with five neighbouring O atoms, exhibiting an uncharacteristic coordination environment.
Related literature
For related literature, see: Brandão et al. (2005); Haile & Wuensch (2000); Liebau (1985); Rocha & Anderson (2000); Rocha & Lin (2005); dos Santos et al. (2005); Ananias et al. (2001, 2006); Anderson et al. (1994); Ferreira et al. (2003).
Experimental
Crystal data
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Refinement
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Data collection: SMART (Bruker, 1998); cell SMART; data reduction: SAINT-Plus (Bruker, 2003); program(s) used to solve structure: SIR92 (Altomare et al., 1993); program(s) used to refine structure: SHELXTL (Sheldrick, 2008); molecular graphics: DIAMOND (Brandenburg, 2007); software used to prepare material for publication: SHELXTL.
Supporting information
10.1107/S1600536808001608/br2065sup1.cif
contains datablocks I, global. DOI:Structure factors: contains datablock I. DOI: 10.1107/S1600536808001608/br2065Isup2.hkl
Chemicals were purchased from commercial sources and used without further purification. An alkaline solution was prepared by mixing 13.86 g of a sodium silicate solution (Na2O 8 wt%, SiO2 27 wt%), 16.13 g H2O and 4.11 g NaOH, and a second solution was prepared by mixing 17.87 g H2O with 7.60 g of Cu(SO4).15H2O. These two solutions were combined, stirred thoroughly during 2 h and the resulting gel, with a molar composition of CuO: 3.1SiO2: 1.4Na2O: 94.5H2O, was autoclaved for 10 days at 503 K. A crystalline material was obtained [Na2(Cu2Si4O11).2H2O], filtered and treated thermally at 573 K for six hours leads to the removal of the crystallization water molecules.
Even though crystals of the title compound could be indexed with the unit-cell parameters summarized in Table 1, a visual inspection of the centered reflections using RLATT showed the presence of a rotational twin (non-merohedral). A full sphere of reflections was collected and a partial data set was then deconvoluted using CELL_NOW (Sheldrick 2004) into a two-component twin. Data integration was performed by assuming that the second twin domain was identical to the first. The final structural model exhibits a large average U(i,j) tensor, most likely due to the applied
correction which ultimately seems to lead to large U3/U1 ratios.Data collection: SMART (Bruker, 1998); cell
SMART (Bruker, 1998); data reduction: SAINT-Plus (Bruker, 2003); program(s) used to solve structure: SIR92 (Altomare et al., 1993); program(s) used to refine structure: SHELXTL (Sheldrick, 2008); molecular graphics: DIAMOND (Brandenburg, 2007); software used to prepare material for publication: SHELXTL (Sheldrick, 2008).Na2(Cu2O11Si4) | Z = 1 |
Mr = 461.44 | F(000) = 224 |
Triclinic, P1 | Dx = 2.960 Mg m−3 |
Hall symbol: -P 1 | Mo Kα radiation, λ = 0.71073 Å |
a = 5.190 (2) Å | Cell parameters from 758 reflections |
b = 6.299 (3) Å | θ = 8.1–58.1° |
c = 8.196 (4) Å | µ = 4.71 mm−1 |
α = 96.390 (7)° | T = 298 K |
β = 97.281 (7)° | Plate, black |
γ = 100.461 (7)° | 0.28 × 0.08 × 0.04 mm |
V = 258.9 (2) Å3 |
Bruker SMART CCD 1000 diffractometer | 1043 independent reflections |
Radiation source: fine-focus sealed tube | 782 reflections with I > 2σ(I) |
Graphite monochromator | Rint = 0.042 |
ω scans | θmax = 26.4°, θmin = 3.9° |
Absorption correction: multi-scan (TWINABS; Sheldrick, 2002) | h = −6→6 |
Tmin = 0.627, Tmax = 0.834 | k = −7→7 |
1587 measured reflections | l = 0→10 |
Refinement on F2 | 0 restraints |
Least-squares matrix: full | Primary atom site location: structure-invariant direct methods |
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)] = 0.042 | Secondary atom site location: difference Fourier map |
wR(F2) = 0.119 | w = 1/[σ2(Fo2) + (0.0809P)2] where P = (Fo2 + 2Fc2)/3 |
S = 1.01 | (Δ/σ)max < 0.001 |
1043 reflections | Δρmax = 1.40 e Å−3 |
88 parameters | Δρmin = −1.58 e Å−3 |
Na2(Cu2O11Si4) | γ = 100.461 (7)° |
Mr = 461.44 | V = 258.9 (2) Å3 |
Triclinic, P1 | Z = 1 |
a = 5.190 (2) Å | Mo Kα radiation |
b = 6.299 (3) Å | µ = 4.71 mm−1 |
c = 8.196 (4) Å | T = 298 K |
α = 96.390 (7)° | 0.28 × 0.08 × 0.04 mm |
β = 97.281 (7)° |
Bruker SMART CCD 1000 diffractometer | 1043 independent reflections |
Absorption correction: multi-scan (TWINABS; Sheldrick, 2002) | 782 reflections with I > 2σ(I) |
Tmin = 0.627, Tmax = 0.834 | Rint = 0.042 |
1587 measured reflections |
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)] = 0.042 | 88 parameters |
wR(F2) = 0.119 | 0 restraints |
S = 1.01 | Δρmax = 1.40 e Å−3 |
1043 reflections | Δρmin = −1.58 e Å−3 |
Geometry. All e.s.d.'s (except the e.s.d. in the dihedral angle between two l.s. planes) are estimated using the full covariance matrix. The cell e.s.d.'s are taken into account individually in the estimation of e.s.d.'s in distances, angles and torsion angles; correlations between e.s.d.'s in cell parameters are only used when they are defined by crystal symmetry. An approximate (isotropic) treatment of cell e.s.d.'s is used for estimating e.s.d.'s involving l.s. planes. |
Refinement. Refinement of F2 against ALL reflections. The weighted R-factor wR and goodness of fit S are based on F2, conventional R-factors R are based on F, with F set to zero for negative F2. The threshold expression of F2 > σ(F2) is used only for calculating R-factors(gt) etc. and is not relevant to the choice of reflections for refinement. R-factors based on F2 are statistically about twice as large as those based on F, and R- factors based on ALL data will be even larger. |
x | y | z | Uiso*/Ueq | ||
Cu1 | 0.70666 (10) | −0.10891 (9) | 0.93472 (8) | 0.0096 (3) | |
Na1 | 0.8700 (4) | 0.3540 (3) | 1.1990 (3) | 0.0235 (6) | |
Si1 | 1.0175 (2) | 0.1358 (2) | 0.67930 (18) | 0.0087 (4) | |
Si2 | 0.5954 (3) | 0.3456 (2) | 0.80969 (18) | 0.0089 (4) | |
O1 | 1.0000 | 0.0000 | 0.5000 | 0.0217 (13) | |
O2 | 1.0064 (7) | −0.0190 (6) | 0.8196 (5) | 0.0127 (8) | |
O3 | 0.7804 (6) | 0.2736 (6) | 0.6719 (5) | 0.0126 (8) | |
O4 | 0.2923 (6) | 0.3209 (5) | 0.7137 (5) | 0.0144 (8) | |
O5 | 0.7200 (7) | 0.5899 (6) | 0.8873 (5) | 0.0170 (9) | |
O6 | 0.5974 (6) | 0.1760 (5) | 0.9452 (5) | 0.0107 (8) |
U11 | U22 | U33 | U12 | U13 | U23 | |
Cu1 | 0.0054 (4) | 0.0083 (4) | 0.0159 (4) | 0.0011 (2) | 0.0051 (2) | 0.0018 (2) |
Na1 | 0.0137 (11) | 0.0161 (12) | 0.0396 (16) | 0.0021 (9) | 0.0072 (10) | −0.0030 (10) |
Si1 | 0.0048 (7) | 0.0096 (7) | 0.0124 (8) | 0.0018 (5) | 0.0034 (5) | 0.0009 (5) |
Si2 | 0.0040 (6) | 0.0078 (7) | 0.0155 (8) | 0.0013 (5) | 0.0042 (5) | 0.0018 (5) |
O1 | 0.020 (3) | 0.024 (3) | 0.021 (3) | 0.006 (2) | 0.007 (2) | −0.006 (2) |
O2 | 0.0078 (17) | 0.0137 (18) | 0.018 (2) | 0.0033 (13) | 0.0040 (14) | 0.0045 (14) |
O3 | 0.0057 (16) | 0.0169 (19) | 0.018 (2) | 0.0068 (14) | 0.0049 (14) | 0.0018 (14) |
O4 | 0.0063 (16) | 0.0140 (18) | 0.023 (2) | 0.0017 (14) | 0.0014 (14) | 0.0061 (15) |
O5 | 0.0145 (18) | 0.0100 (18) | 0.028 (2) | 0.0000 (14) | 0.0129 (16) | 0.0016 (15) |
O6 | 0.0082 (16) | 0.0111 (17) | 0.016 (2) | 0.0039 (13) | 0.0061 (14) | 0.0050 (14) |
Cu1—O5i | 1.909 (3) | Si1—O4iv | 1.642 (4) |
Cu1—O2 | 1.950 (4) | Si2—O5 | 1.583 (4) |
Cu1—O6ii | 1.970 (4) | Si2—O6 | 1.625 (4) |
Cu1—O6 | 1.974 (3) | Si2—O4 | 1.639 (3) |
Cu1—O2iii | 2.316 (4) | Si2—O3 | 1.650 (4) |
Cu1—Cu1ii | 2.9921 (13) | Si2—Cu1ii | 3.1221 (19) |
Cu1—Cu1iii | 3.1031 (15) | O1—Si1v | 1.5991 (14) |
Cu1—Si2ii | 3.1221 (19) | O2—Cu1iii | 2.316 (4) |
Cu1—Si1 | 3.1673 (19) | O4—Si1vi | 1.642 (4) |
Si1—O2 | 1.588 (4) | O5—Cu1vii | 1.909 (3) |
Si1—O1 | 1.5991 (14) | O6—Cu1ii | 1.970 (4) |
Si1—O3 | 1.629 (3) | ||
O5i—Cu1—O2 | 92.49 (15) | O2iii—Cu1—Si1 | 100.98 (10) |
O5i—Cu1—O6ii | 91.91 (15) | Cu1ii—Cu1—Si1 | 115.23 (4) |
O2—Cu1—O6ii | 175.60 (13) | Cu1iii—Cu1—Si1 | 64.33 (4) |
O5i—Cu1—O6 | 164.27 (15) | Si2ii—Cu1—Si1 | 179.25 (4) |
O2—Cu1—O6 | 94.42 (14) | O2—Si1—O1 | 111.33 (15) |
O6ii—Cu1—O6 | 81.32 (16) | O2—Si1—O3 | 112.6 (2) |
O5i—Cu1—O2iii | 105.60 (16) | O1—Si1—O3 | 108.16 (15) |
O2—Cu1—O2iii | 87.05 (15) | O2—Si1—O4iv | 111.48 (19) |
O6ii—Cu1—O2iii | 91.76 (14) | O1—Si1—O4iv | 108.08 (16) |
O6—Cu1—O2iii | 88.87 (14) | O3—Si1—O4iv | 104.92 (18) |
O5i—Cu1—Cu1ii | 131.06 (12) | O1—Si1—Cu1 | 115.96 (7) |
O2—Cu1—Cu1ii | 135.03 (10) | O3—Si1—Cu1 | 84.08 (15) |
O6ii—Cu1—Cu1ii | 40.70 (10) | O4iv—Si1—Cu1 | 129.55 (15) |
O6—Cu1—Cu1ii | 40.62 (10) | O5—Si2—O6 | 113.2 (2) |
O2iii—Cu1—Cu1ii | 90.41 (9) | O5—Si2—O4 | 111.75 (19) |
O5i—Cu1—Cu1iii | 103.18 (12) | O6—Si2—O4 | 109.3 (2) |
O2—Cu1—Cu1iii | 48.19 (11) | O5—Si2—O3 | 107.1 (2) |
O6ii—Cu1—Cu1iii | 130.50 (11) | O6—Si2—O3 | 107.00 (19) |
O6—Cu1—Cu1iii | 91.93 (10) | O4—Si2—O3 | 108.15 (19) |
O2iii—Cu1—Cu1iii | 38.86 (9) | O5—Si2—Cu1ii | 109.62 (16) |
Cu1ii—Cu1—Cu1iii | 116.74 (4) | O4—Si2—Cu1ii | 81.61 (15) |
O5i—Cu1—Si2ii | 73.75 (12) | O3—Si2—Cu1ii | 134.72 (14) |
O2—Cu1—Si2ii | 156.11 (11) | Si1v—O1—Si1 | 180.0 |
O6ii—Cu1—Si2ii | 26.72 (10) | Si1—O2—Cu1 | 126.8 (2) |
O6—Cu1—Si2ii | 103.96 (11) | Si1—O2—Cu1iii | 116.29 (18) |
O2iii—Cu1—Si2ii | 78.31 (10) | Cu1—O2—Cu1iii | 92.95 (15) |
Cu1ii—Cu1—Si2ii | 64.59 (4) | Si1—O3—Si2 | 132.7 (3) |
Cu1iii—Cu1—Si2ii | 115.04 (5) | Si2—O4—Si1vi | 137.0 (2) |
O5i—Cu1—Si1 | 106.73 (13) | Si2—O5—Cu1vii | 152.9 (2) |
O2—Cu1—Si1 | 23.68 (11) | Si2—O6—Cu1ii | 120.24 (18) |
O6ii—Cu1—Si1 | 153.39 (10) | Si2—O6—Cu1 | 130.3 (2) |
O6—Cu1—Si1 | 75.74 (11) | Cu1ii—O6—Cu1 | 98.68 (16) |
Symmetry codes: (i) x, y−1, z; (ii) −x+1, −y, −z+2; (iii) −x+2, −y, −z+2; (iv) x+1, y, z; (v) −x+2, −y, −z+1; (vi) x−1, y, z; (vii) x, y+1, z. |
Experimental details
Crystal data | |
Chemical formula | Na2(Cu2O11Si4) |
Mr | 461.44 |
Crystal system, space group | Triclinic, P1 |
Temperature (K) | 298 |
a, b, c (Å) | 5.190 (2), 6.299 (3), 8.196 (4) |
α, β, γ (°) | 96.390 (7), 97.281 (7), 100.461 (7) |
V (Å3) | 258.9 (2) |
Z | 1 |
Radiation type | Mo Kα |
µ (mm−1) | 4.71 |
Crystal size (mm) | 0.28 × 0.08 × 0.04 |
Data collection | |
Diffractometer | Bruker SMART CCD 1000 diffractometer |
Absorption correction | Multi-scan (TWINABS; Sheldrick, 2002) |
Tmin, Tmax | 0.627, 0.834 |
No. of measured, independent and observed [I > 2σ(I)] reflections | 1587, 1043, 782 |
Rint | 0.042 |
(sin θ/λ)max (Å−1) | 0.625 |
Refinement | |
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)], wR(F2), S | 0.042, 0.119, 1.01 |
No. of reflections | 1043 |
No. of parameters | 88 |
Δρmax, Δρmin (e Å−3) | 1.40, −1.58 |
Computer programs: SMART (Bruker, 1998), SAINT-Plus (Bruker, 2003), SIR92 (Altomare et al., 1993), SHELXTL (Sheldrick, 2008), DIAMOND (Brandenburg, 2007).
Cu1—O5i | 1.909 (3) | Cu1—O6 | 1.974 (3) |
Cu1—O2 | 1.950 (4) | Cu1—O2iii | 2.316 (4) |
Cu1—O6ii | 1.970 (4) |
Symmetry codes: (i) x, y−1, z; (ii) −x+1, −y, −z+2; (iii) −x+2, −y, −z+2. |
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to the Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT, Portugal) for their general financial support under the POCI programme (supported by FEDER) and for a Postdoctoral Fellowship (SFRH/BPD/14410/2003) to LCS.
References
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Molecular sieves containing metal cations with a range of coordination geometries have been extensively studied due to their novel topologies, interesting chemical properties and potential aplications in optoelectronics, batteries, magnetic materials and sensors (besides the traditional applications of zeolites) (Rocha & Anderson, 2000; Rocha & Lin, 2005). In the last decade, we have been interested in the synthesis and structural characterization of novel open-frameworks containing Si and metal cations (such as Ti, V, Cr, Nb, Zr and Sn) in tetrahedral and (more commonly) octahedral coordination environments, and lanthanide silicates exhibiting interesting photoluminescence properties (Anderson et al., 1994; Ananias et al., 2001; Ferreira et al., 2003; Ananias et al., 2006). As part of this research line, we prepared and characterized the hydrated copper silicate Na2(Cu2Si4O11).2H2O (Brandão et al., 2005). This compound was dehydrated and the magnetic properties of both hydrated and dehydrated forms were investigated (Santos et al., 2005), however the crystalline structure of the dehydrated compound was not reported. Here we describe the structure of the dehydrated microporous copper silicate, Na2(Cu2Si4O11) (I).
The asymmetric unit of the copper silicate (I) comprises one Cu(II) cation, two corner-shared SiO4 groups and one Na+ counter-cation (Figure 1). The crystallographic unique Cu(II) metal centre is coordinated to five O-atoms from five distinct SiO4 tetrahedral moieties (four basal SiO4 and one apical SiO4), in a geometry resembling a distorted square pyramid for which the apical Cu—O bond is longer than the basal ones (Figure 2a and Table 1).
Adjacent SiO4 tetrahedral moieties are linked along the a direction by corner-shared oxygen atoms (O3 and O4 are shared alternately) leading to the formation of zigzag metallic anionic chains, [(Cu2Si4O11)∞]2-, in which the Cu···Cu distances alternate between 2.9921 (8) Å (via bridging basal SiO4, green bonds in Fig. 2 b) and 3.1031 (10) Å (via the apical SiO4 tetrahedron, yellow bonds in Fig. 2 b). [(Cu2Si4O11)∞]2- chains are interconnected via corner-sharing SiO4 tetrahedra through linear interactions Si1–O1–Siiv [angle is 180.0°; symmetry code: (iv) 2 - x, -y, 1 - z] to form infinite layers (Fig. 2c). This linear Si–O–Si interaction is very rare and represents a remarkable structural feature of the copper silicate (I) framework. We note that such occurrence was also recently reported in the lanthanide silicate K3(NdSi7O17) (Haile & Wuensch, 2000). From the evaluation of the structures of several hundred silicates it was concluded that the average of an unstrained Si—O—Si bond angle is ca 139° and that truly linear bonds are energetically unfavorable (Liebau, 1985). In fact, the crystallographically determined values of 180° are more likely to represent a time average rather than the actual value of the bond angle. The bond, at any instant in time, should have an O-atom displaced from its average position such that the instantaneous value of Si—O—Si is less than 180° (Haile & Wuensch, 2000). This structural feature is ultimately reflected in the anisotropic displacement parameters associated with this bridging O-atom. Indeed, the thermal parameters associated with this atom are unusually large, with the greatest displacement occurring in the plane perpendicular to the Si1···Si1iv vector (Figure 2c).
As observed for the chains, adjacent layers are also interconnected via corner-sharing SiO4 tetrahedra generating a three-dimensional microporous framework with the major channels running along the a direction, formed by eight-membered rings and having a cross-section of ca 7.5 × 4.3 Å (Figure 3a). Interestingly, the Na+ cations are located within the channels but are remarkably close to the previously described layers, creating an effective porous copper framework (Figure 3a). In addition, remarkably large channels are also observed along the b direction, which are formed by six-membered rings and display a cros-section of ca 5.2 × 4.6 Å (Figure 3 b).