research communications
A flexible MOF formed from CuII and 2,3-dihydroxyterephthalic acid
aEaStCHEM School of Chemistry, Purdie Building, North Haugh, St Andrews KY16 9ST, United Kingdom
*Correspondence e-mail: [email protected]
Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) are an exciting class of porous materials with applications in many fields. To find the optimal MOF for every application it is important to synthesize new materials to find those with the desirable properties. Here we present a MOF based on CuII and 2,3-dihydroxyterephthalate, whose structure in both fully solvated and partially desolvated forms, namely, poly[[triaqua(μ-2,3-dihydroxyterephthalato)(μ-2,3-dioxidoterephthalato)tricopper(II)] monohydrate], {[Cu3(C8H2O6)(C8H4O6)(H2O)3]·H2O}n, and poly[[diaqua(μ-2,3-dihydroxyterephthalato)(μ-2,3-dioxidoterephthalato)tricopper(II)] ethanol monosolvate monohydrate] {[Cu3(C8H2O6)(C8H4O6)(H2O)2]·C2H5OH·H2O}n, has been solved with single-crystal X-ray diffraction. It shows one-dimensional hexagonal channels and a flexible behaviour in response to changes in solvation.
Keywords: metal–organic framework; flexible MOF; SCXRD; crystal structure.
1. Chemical context
Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are a rapidly growing class of porous materials (Ettlinger et al., 2024
). They consist of metal ions or clusters bound together by organic linkers to form crystalline frameworks with potential porosity (Batten et al., 2013
). The discovery of new MOFs is important, not only for the academic pleasure of synthesising new materials, but also to allow for advancements across many fields, from the adsorption of gases to zygote gene therapy (Martínez-Ahumada et al., 2020
; Li et al., 2011
; Gonzalez et al., 2017
; Sameni et al., 2024
; Howarth et al., 2017
; Xu & Yaghi, 2020
). There are various methods for generating new MOFs. These include using reticular chemistry, to modify known topologies to modify pore size or reactivity (Freund et al., 2021
), and mixing new combinations of ions and linkers to generate completely new systems with different structures and properties (Stock & Biswas, 2012
). Both techniques are important, and it is often a combination of the two that leads to the optimal material for any one application.
The latest generation of MOFs includes those with flexible or responsive characteristics (Kitagawa, 2017
). Capable of responding to external stimuli such as heat, solvent or pressure these materials show great potential in many fields, for instance in separations (Schneemann et al., 2014
). When searching for flexible MOFs it is important to consider both the metal, and its chemical lability, as well as the geometry of the linker. The CuII ion is a particularly labile one and well suited to generating flexible MOFs (Rieth et al., 2019
; McHugh et al., 2018
). The linker can also be responsible for flexibility by being flexible itself or by its structure frustrating the binding around the metal site, allowing for flexible behaviour in the system as a whole (Schneemann et al., 2014
).
Understanding the structures of MOFs is important for knowing how best to apply a particular framework. This is especially true when the structure changes in response to external stimuli. Single crystal X-ray diffraction (scXRD) is one the most powerful tools in the modern chemist's arsenal for understanding the structure of a material. Here we present a new MOF made from CuII and 2,3-dihydroxyterephthalic acid (2,3-dhtp). By using scXRD we have determined the structure as well as the structure after partial with the MOF showing a flexible response to this change.
2. Structural commentary
Reacting copper acetate and 2,3-dhtp in a 1:1 DMF:water solvent mix at room temperature produces brown crystals of a product denoted St Andrews MOF (SIMOF-6), which were suitable for single crystal X-ray crystallography. The structure crystallized in the orthorhombic Pnma with unit-cell parameters a = 26.9440 (5) Å, b = 16.4946 (3) Å, c = 6.8910 (2) Å, and cell volume 3062.5 (1) Å3. It has formula [Cu2(C8H2O6)(C8H4O8)(H2O)2]·(H2O)·(solvent) with an estimated additional five water solvates. There are two distinct Cu sites, the first (Cu1) is five-coordinate distorted square pyramidal with four bonds in a plane to 2,3-dhtp molecules [1.922 (3)–1.961 (2) Å] and one perpendicular to a water ligand [2.257 (3) Å]. The second site is also five-coordinate distorted square pyramidal, with four bonds in a plane to 2,3-dhtp molecules [1.952 (4)–1.989 (5) Å]. It is, however, disordered above and below this plane with the copper modelled in across two sites with 56:44 occupancy. Each site is bonded to a water ligand [2.31 (2) and 2.29 (2) Å] perpendicular to the 2,3-dhtp plane and with a water solvate in the opposing position which is hydrogen bonded to the copper bound water ligands (Fig. S1a). One 2,3-dhtp ligand is tetra-anionic with both hydroxyl groups coordinating as well as the carboxylates, while the second independent ligand is di-anionic and coordinates through the carboxylates with the position of the hydroxyl groups disordered 50:50.
The SIMOF-6 structure contains a planar secondary building unit (SBU) in which three Cu atoms sit in a plane bonded to a 2,3-dhtp molecule with a 4− charge (Fig. 1
a). The middle Cu atom is disordered and five-coordinate (Cu2) while the outer two are ordered five-coordinate (Cu1). There are two bridging disordered 2,3-dhtp molecules coming from each SBU in which the phenol groups are protonated giving them a 2− charge. The disorder in these linkers consists of the 2,3-dhtp being in two orientations a 180° rotation apart so that the phenol groups appear on both sides of the ring with 50% occupancy. The remaining bonding of the SBU is to the 2,3-dhtp carboxylates of SBUs on either side. This binding produces 1D chains of Cu atoms and 4− 2,3-dhtp running down the crystallographic b-axis direction, linked together by the disordered 2− 2,3-dhtp to produce 1D hexagonal channels running down the b-axis direction (Fig. 1
b).
| Figure 1 (a) 50% probability ellipsoids showing the SBU of solvated SIMOF-6. (b) Ball and stick model of solvated SIMOF-6 viewed down the crystallographic b axis. (c) 50% probability ellipsoids showing the SBU of partially desolvated SIMOF-6. (d) Ball and stick model of partially desolvated SIMOF-6 viewed down the crystallographic b axis. H = pink, O = red, C = black, Cu = blue, some disorder modelling has been removed for clarity. |
This material can be partially desolvated through solvent exchange with ethanol (by washing on filter) and drying at atmospheric pressure and a temperature of 333 K overnight. This process caused some damage to the crystals but they remained suitable for X-ray analysis. The partially desolvated structure stayed in the Pnma but the shrank to a = 23.412 (2) Å, b = 16.7735 (8) Å, c = 7.4097 (5) Å and the unit-cell volume became 2909.9 (3) Å3. The formula becomes [Cu2(C8H2O6)(C8H4O8)(C2H5O)(H2O)]·H2O·(solvent) with the overall structure similar to the solvated form with two distinct Cu sites which are both five-coordinate distorted square pyramidal. The first site, Cu1, contains four bonds in a plane to 2,3-dhtp molecules [1.920 (7)–1.961 (6) Å] and one perpendicular to a water ligand [2.256 (7) Å] that lies in the `wall' of the pore. The second site, Cu2, has four bonds in a plane to 2,3-dhtp molecules [1.945 (6)–1.950 (6) Å] and one perpendicular to a solvent molecule [2.304 (12) Å] that lies in the pore. There is no sign from this data of the copper disorder seen in the solvated form (Fig. S1b). The binding of the SBUs is still relatively unchanged (Fig. 1
c). However, the small changes around the SBU, caused by loss of solvent, have caused the distorted hexagonal channels to be slightly offset so that the Cu chains are closer together and the disordered 2− 2,3-dhtp is rotated, leading to a slightly smaller pore and more densely packed structure (Fig. 1
d).
No further solvent in either structure could be reasonably modelled, so both were treated with a mask with a 1.2 Å probe. In the solvated structure, the mask found 316 electrons per unit cell within the 1226 Å3 of free pore volume, which equates to approximately 30 additional water molecules per However, from the reaction conditions it is possible that some of this density may be from DMF. In the partially desolvated structure, the mask found 118 electrons per within the 732 Å3 of free pore volume, as expected, lower than the solvated form. However, due to the potential mixture of ethanol and water and the lower data quality of these crystals, the amount of additional solvent is indeterminate.
3. Characterization
The purity of SIMOF-6 synthesised in this fashion was confirmed by means of powder X-ray diffraction and FTIR spectroscopy (Fig. 2
). The two phases of SIMOF-6 (solvated and partially desolvated) can both occur simultaneously. Any dry powder contains the desolvated phase, even after soaking in DMF (24 h), as can be seen in the PXRD patterns (Fig. 2
a). The desolvated phase can be isolated by solvent exchanging with acetone (by washing on filter) and drying at room temperature and atmospheric pressure. Soaking this phase in solvent, e.g. DMF, can reform the solvated phase after only 5 mins of soaking. However, washing with water and then drying leads to a further phase change (Fig. 2
b). Soaking the MOF with acetone (24 h) and drying at 333 K leads to a fourth phase with even smaller d-spacing (Fig. 2
b). Neither of these phase changes can be reversed with solvent exchange and the loss in crystallinity means scXRD structure determination is not possible. FTIR shows no change in the spectra on transition between phases, with the only difference being the presence of DMF (1650 cm−1) in the relevant samples (Fig. 2
c). This means that the local binding environment remains the same during phase transition with only the long-range geometry of the system changing. The high temperature drying may be removing the water molecules in the `wall' of the pore, thus causing a larger irreversible structural change. Removing free water may also remove these molecules via capillary action causing a similar effect. Other carboxylate-based Cu MOFs have shown instability to water and its removal due to the lability of the metal ion (McHugh et al., 2018
; Burtch et al., 2014
; Singh et al., 2016
).
| Figure 2 (a) and (b) PXRD patterns obtained with Mo Kα radiation and (c) FTIR spectra of SIMOF-6 under different conditions: calculated solvated (black), calculated partially desolvated (red), washed with DMF (blue), washed with acetone and dried at room temperature (green), washed with water and dried (pink), then washed with DMF (purple), washed with acetone and dried at 333 K (off yellow) and then washed with DMF (orange). |
Thermal gravimetric analysis of both the solvated and partially desolvated SIMOF-6 show solvent loss between 30 and 125°C, with the solvated sample showing 10 wt% more solvent loss across this temperature range (Fig S2). Both samples start undergoing thermal decomposition at 260°C. For the solvated sample the metal linker ratio is consistent with the scXRD structure (linker/copper = 0.66). However, the desolvated sample shows a slightly reduced amount of linker (linker/copper = 0.62), perhaps suggestive of defect formation on desolvation. Furthermore, the phase change observed on complete desolvation results in low nitrogen adsorption at 77 K (Fig. S3) with a type II isotherm and BET surface area calculations, using the Roquerol criteria, (Rouquerol et al., 2007
) leading to a maximum surface area of only 6 m2 g−1, obtained after activating at 90°C, under vacuum, overnight. Even though the flexibility of the MOF means there is no measurable porosity with nitrogen, it is clear from the crystal structure that the system is potentially porous to the right compounds.
4. Conclusion
We have presented here a new MOF we call SIMOF-6. It is made from five-coordinate CuII ions and 2,3-dhtp molecules, which are present as both di and tetra anions. It has solvent containing 1D hexagonal channels and shows an interesting flexible behaviour in response to changes in solvation. This responsive behaviour may be useful; however, care must be taken as complete solvent removal causes an irreversible change to a dense phase.
5. Synthesis and crystallization
2 mmol of CuII acetate monohydrate were dissolved in 64 mL of water and 1600 µL of acetic acid. 2 mmol of 2,3-dhtp were dissolved in 64 mL of DMF. The two solutions were mixed in a glass vial and left at room temperature for 7 days. The resultant solid was separated via filtration and washed with DMF for the swollen form, or DMF, EtOH and/or acetone for the desolvated form. This produced large brown crystals of SIMOF-6.
6. Refinement
Crystal data, data collection and structure details are summarized in Table 1
. In the parent structure of SIMOF-6, non-hydrogen atoms were refined anisotropically and hydrogen atoms were refined using a riding model except the disordered aromatic hydrogens of the di-anionic 2,3-dhtp which were refined in fixed positions. To model the disordered Cu2 site, SIMU restraints of 0.02 esd were required for the metal-bound and hydrogen-bonded waters and a SIMU restraint of 0.04 esd for the metal sites. The hydrogen atoms on the disordered water were placed in calculated positions. The structure contained pores of disordered solvent (1226 Å3, 316 e−), which were treated with smtbx.mask using a 1.2 Å probe. In the structure of the partially desolvated SIMOF-6, non-hydrogen atoms were refined anisotropically, except one of the disordered phenol oxygens, which was refined isotropically due to the weaker data. Hydrogen atoms were refined using a riding model. The framework carbons were restrained with a SIMU restraint of esd 0.02 and one carbon was restrained with an ISOR restraint with esd 0.01. The metal-bound EtOH molecule was subject to DFIX, DANG and SIMU restraints to maintain the expected geometry. The structure contained pores of disordered solvent (732 Å3, 118 e−), which were treated with smtbx.mask using a 1.2 Å probe.
|
7. Further characterization
Powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD) patterns were recorded on a Stoe STADI/P diffractometer using Mo Kα1 radiation at room temperature in capillary Debye–Scherrer mode. FTIR spectra were obtained using a Shimadzu IRAffinity-1S spectrometer (4000-400 cm−1). TGA was performed using a STA780 with a crucible and a temperature ramp of 10°C min−1 under air flow of 30 mL min−1. N2 adsorption isotherms were recorded on a Micromeritics Tristar ii Surface Area and Porosity Instrument. Samples were added to a frit tube and activated in vacuo (∼3×10−5 mbar, 16 h) at 90°C prior to the measurement.
Supporting information
contains datablocks SIMOF6_solvated, SIMOF6_partiallydesolvated, global. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S205698902500653X/vu2013sup1.cif
Structure factors: contains datablock SIMOF6_solvated. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S205698902500653X/vu2013SIMOF6_solvatedsup2.hkl
Structure factors: contains datablock SIMOF6_partiallydesolvated. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S205698902500653X/vu2013SIMOF6_partiallydesolvatedsup3.hkl
| [Cu3(C8H2O6)(C8H4O6)(H2O)3]·H2O | Dx = 1.416 Mg m−3 |
| Mr = 217.62 | Cu Kα radiation, λ = 1.54184 Å |
| Orthorhombic, Pnma | Cell parameters from 14159 reflections |
| a = 26.9440 (5) Å | θ = 4.2–66.3° |
| b = 16.4946 (3) Å | µ = 2.97 mm−1 |
| c = 6.8910 (2) Å | T = 173 K |
| V = 3062.57 (12) Å3 | Prism, orange |
| Z = 12 | 0.03 × 0.02 × 0.02 mm |
| F(000) = 1300 |
| Rigaku XtaLAB P100K diffractometer | 2758 reflections with I > 2σ(I) |
| Detector resolution: 5.8140 pixels mm-1 | Rint = 0.027 |
| shutterless ω scans | θmax = 66.8°, θmin = 3.3° |
| Absorption correction: multi-scan (CrysAlisPro; Rigaku, 2023) | h = −32→31 |
| Tmin = 0.894, Tmax = 1.000 | k = −19→19 |
| 26792 measured reflections | l = −8→6 |
| 2817 independent reflections |
| Refinement on F2 | 23 restraints |
| Least-squares matrix: full | Hydrogen site location: mixed |
| R[F2 > 2σ(F2)] = 0.047 | H-atom parameters constrained |
| wR(F2) = 0.125 | w = 1/[σ2(Fo2) + (0.0517P)2 + 10.5953P] where P = (Fo2 + 2Fc2)/3 |
| S = 1.13 | (Δ/σ)max = 0.001 |
| 2817 reflections | Δρmax = 1.44 e Å−3 |
| 194 parameters | Δρmin = −0.62 e Å−3 |
Geometry. All esds (except the esd in the dihedral angle between two l.s. planes) are estimated using the full covariance matrix. The cell esds are taken into account individually in the estimation of esds in distances, angles and torsion angles; correlations between esds in cell parameters are only used when they are defined by crystal symmetry. An approximate (isotropic) treatment of cell esds is used for estimating esds involving l.s. planes. |
Refinement. Selected crystals of as-made SIMOF-6 were analysed using a Rigaku MM-007HF High Brilliance RA generator/confocal optics with XtaLAB P100 diffractometer [Cu Kα radiation (λ = 1.54187 Å)]. Data were collected (using a calculated strategy) and processed (including correction for Lorentz, polarization and absorption) using CrysAlis PRO (Rigaku Dn, 2025). Structures were solved by dual-space methods (SHELXT2018/2; Sheldrick, 2015a) and refined by full-matrix least-squares against F2 (SHELXL2018/3; Sheldrick, 2015b). |
| x | y | z | Uiso*/Ueq | Occ. (<1) | |
| Cu1 | 0.30580 (2) | 0.56625 (3) | 0.07289 (8) | 0.02339 (18) | |
| Cu2A | 0.3599 (2) | 0.750000 | 0.0965 (14) | 0.0197 (10) | 0.54 (2) |
| O1 | 0.31234 (8) | 0.67129 (12) | 0.1972 (3) | 0.0188 (5) | |
| O2 | 0.19792 (9) | 0.54538 (15) | 0.4762 (4) | 0.0266 (6) | |
| O3 | 0.37142 (9) | 0.56716 (15) | −0.0440 (4) | 0.0314 (6) | |
| O4 | 0.41517 (9) | 0.67057 (14) | 0.0756 (4) | 0.0250 (5) | |
| O5 | 0.41049 (19) | 0.4260 (3) | −0.0804 (10) | 0.0387 (15) | 0.5 |
| H5 | 0.388468 | 0.459996 | −0.109119 | 0.058* | 0.5 |
| O6 | 0.51041 (18) | 0.6622 (3) | 0.0890 (10) | 0.0371 (14) | 0.5 |
| H6 | 0.486381 | 0.678576 | 0.156045 | 0.056* | 0.5 |
| O7 | 0.25594 (9) | 0.53179 (14) | 0.2546 (4) | 0.0316 (6) | |
| O8 | 0.26194 (12) | 0.62911 (17) | −0.1621 (4) | 0.0424 (7) | |
| H8A | 0.247997 | 0.593000 | −0.258607 | 0.064* | |
| H8B | 0.281833 | 0.663431 | −0.245261 | 0.064* | |
| O9B | 0.3248 (5) | 0.750000 | −0.316 (3) | 0.046 (3) | 0.46 (2) |
| H9B | 0.346040 | 0.722130 | −0.374454 | 0.068* | 0.46 (2) |
| C1 | 0.27112 (11) | 0.70692 (19) | 0.2709 (5) | 0.0175 (6) | |
| C2 | 0.22831 (12) | 0.5753 (2) | 0.3604 (5) | 0.0215 (7) | |
| C3 | 0.23088 (12) | 0.66519 (19) | 0.3492 (5) | 0.0186 (7) | |
| C4 | 0.19033 (12) | 0.7089 (2) | 0.4263 (5) | 0.0234 (7) | |
| H4 | 0.162773 | 0.680358 | 0.478614 | 0.028* | |
| C5 | 0.41138 (12) | 0.5989 (2) | 0.0134 (6) | 0.0242 (7) | |
| C6 | 0.45725 (13) | 0.5487 (2) | 0.0037 (5) | 0.0243 (7) | |
| C7 | 0.45371 (13) | 0.4654 (2) | −0.0403 (6) | 0.0284 (8) | |
| C8 | 0.50366 (14) | 0.5821 (2) | 0.0435 (6) | 0.0291 (8) | |
| Cu2B | 0.3660 (2) | 0.750000 | 0.1545 (13) | 0.0171 (10) | 0.46 (2) |
| O9A | 0.3297 (4) | 0.750000 | −0.218 (2) | 0.030 (2) | 0.54 (2) |
| H9A | 0.312310 | 0.788363 | −0.167610 | 0.044* | 0.54 (2) |
| O10A | 0.4040 (5) | 0.750000 | −0.435 (3) | 0.149 (8) | 0.54 (2) |
| H10A | 0.386000 | 0.711550 | −0.382607 | 0.223* | 0.54 (2) |
| O10B | 0.3945 (4) | 0.750000 | −0.5319 (17) | 0.036 (3) | 0.46 (2) |
| H10B | 0.417109 | 0.720810 | −0.474874 | 0.054* | 0.46 (2) |
| H8 | 0.506625 | 0.638614 | 0.061442 | 1.000* | 0.5 |
| H7 | 0.421954 | 0.444131 | −0.065336 | 1.000* | 0.5 |
| U11 | U22 | U33 | U12 | U13 | U23 | |
| Cu1 | 0.0215 (3) | 0.0135 (3) | 0.0351 (3) | −0.00399 (18) | 0.0044 (2) | −0.0071 (2) |
| Cu2A | 0.0146 (14) | 0.0086 (9) | 0.036 (3) | 0.000 | 0.0061 (15) | 0.000 |
| O1 | 0.0152 (11) | 0.0097 (10) | 0.0315 (12) | −0.0004 (8) | 0.0041 (9) | 0.0008 (9) |
| O2 | 0.0226 (12) | 0.0170 (12) | 0.0402 (14) | −0.0022 (9) | 0.0058 (11) | 0.0053 (11) |
| O3 | 0.0192 (12) | 0.0230 (13) | 0.0520 (17) | 0.0023 (10) | 0.0060 (11) | −0.0102 (12) |
| O4 | 0.0196 (12) | 0.0136 (11) | 0.0417 (15) | 0.0017 (9) | 0.0042 (10) | −0.0034 (10) |
| O5 | 0.017 (2) | 0.020 (3) | 0.078 (4) | 0.009 (2) | −0.001 (3) | −0.019 (3) |
| O6 | 0.017 (2) | 0.017 (2) | 0.077 (4) | 0.000 (2) | 0.011 (3) | −0.014 (3) |
| O7 | 0.0318 (14) | 0.0125 (11) | 0.0505 (16) | −0.0015 (10) | 0.0129 (12) | 0.0004 (11) |
| O8 | 0.0565 (19) | 0.0251 (14) | 0.0456 (17) | −0.0024 (13) | −0.0202 (15) | 0.0014 (13) |
| O9B | 0.035 (6) | 0.064 (7) | 0.037 (8) | 0.000 | 0.014 (6) | 0.000 |
| C1 | 0.0160 (15) | 0.0139 (15) | 0.0226 (16) | 0.0013 (12) | −0.0018 (12) | 0.0013 (13) |
| C2 | 0.0183 (16) | 0.0168 (16) | 0.0295 (18) | 0.0000 (13) | −0.0028 (14) | 0.0030 (14) |
| C3 | 0.0181 (15) | 0.0151 (15) | 0.0226 (16) | −0.0013 (12) | −0.0021 (13) | 0.0014 (13) |
| C4 | 0.0171 (16) | 0.0204 (17) | 0.0327 (19) | −0.0024 (13) | 0.0053 (14) | 0.0031 (15) |
| C5 | 0.0206 (17) | 0.0154 (16) | 0.0366 (19) | −0.0007 (13) | 0.0070 (15) | 0.0002 (14) |
| C6 | 0.0205 (17) | 0.0192 (17) | 0.0334 (19) | 0.0019 (14) | 0.0061 (15) | −0.0042 (15) |
| C7 | 0.0243 (18) | 0.0192 (17) | 0.042 (2) | −0.0010 (14) | 0.0050 (16) | −0.0064 (16) |
| C8 | 0.0234 (18) | 0.0166 (16) | 0.047 (2) | 0.0000 (14) | 0.0041 (16) | −0.0064 (16) |
| Cu2B | 0.0128 (14) | 0.0097 (10) | 0.029 (2) | 0.000 | 0.0026 (15) | 0.000 |
| O9A | 0.042 (5) | 0.026 (4) | 0.021 (5) | 0.000 | 0.009 (4) | 0.000 |
| O10A | 0.037 (7) | 0.37 (3) | 0.040 (8) | 0.000 | 0.017 (6) | 0.000 |
| O10B | 0.027 (5) | 0.057 (7) | 0.025 (6) | 0.000 | −0.003 (4) | 0.000 |
| Cu1—O1 | 1.941 (2) | O9B—H9B | 0.838 (11) |
| Cu1—O2i | 1.961 (2) | O9B—H9Bii | 0.838 (11) |
| Cu1—O3 | 1.943 (3) | O9B—H9Aii | 1.249 (16) |
| Cu1—O7 | 1.922 (3) | C1—C1ii | 1.421 (6) |
| Cu1—O8 | 2.257 (3) | C1—C3 | 1.393 (5) |
| Cu2A—O1ii | 1.952 (4) | C2—C3 | 1.487 (5) |
| Cu2A—O1 | 1.952 (4) | C3—C4 | 1.412 (5) |
| Cu2A—O4 | 1.989 (5) | C4—C4ii | 1.357 (7) |
| Cu2A—O4ii | 1.989 (5) | C4—H4 | 0.9500 |
| Cu2A—O9A | 2.31 (2) | C5—C6 | 1.489 (5) |
| O1—C1 | 1.355 (4) | C6—C7 | 1.410 (5) |
| O1—Cu2B | 1.966 (5) | C6—C8 | 1.394 (5) |
| O2—C2 | 1.245 (4) | C7—C8iii | 1.391 (5) |
| O3—C5 | 1.261 (4) | C7—H7 | 0.941 (4) |
| O4—C5 | 1.262 (4) | C8—H8 | 0.943 (4) |
| O4—Cu2B | 1.940 (5) | Cu2B—O10Biv | 2.293 (19) |
| O5—H5 | 0.8400 | O9A—H9Aii | 0.859 (7) |
| O5—C7 | 1.362 (6) | O9A—H9A | 0.859 (7) |
| O6—H6 | 0.8400 | O10A—H10A | 0.876 (8) |
| O6—C8 | 1.370 (6) | O10A—H10Aii | 0.876 (8) |
| O7—C2 | 1.265 (4) | O10A—H10Bii | 0.658 (8) |
| O8—H8A | 0.9687 | O10B—H10B | 0.870 (9) |
| O8—H8B | 0.9676 | O10B—H10Bii | 0.870 (9) |
| O1—Cu1—O2i | 173.19 (11) | O7—C2—C3 | 120.5 (3) |
| O1—Cu1—O3 | 95.37 (10) | C1—C3—C2 | 123.3 (3) |
| O1—Cu1—O8 | 87.37 (10) | C1—C3—C4 | 119.7 (3) |
| O2i—Cu1—O8 | 99.26 (11) | C4—C3—C2 | 117.0 (3) |
| O3—Cu1—O2i | 85.01 (10) | C3—C4—H4 | 119.7 |
| O3—Cu1—O8 | 100.11 (12) | C4ii—C4—C3 | 120.66 (19) |
| O7—Cu1—O1 | 92.29 (10) | C4ii—C4—H4 | 119.7 |
| O7—Cu1—O2i | 84.71 (11) | O3—C5—O4 | 124.4 (3) |
| O7—Cu1—O3 | 155.26 (12) | O3—C5—C6 | 117.6 (3) |
| O7—Cu1—O8 | 103.72 (12) | O4—C5—C6 | 118.0 (3) |
| O1ii—Cu2A—O1 | 83.4 (2) | C7—C6—C5 | 119.7 (3) |
| O1—Cu2A—O4ii | 162.9 (6) | C8—C6—C5 | 121.0 (3) |
| O1—Cu2A—O4 | 94.54 (13) | C8—C6—C7 | 119.3 (3) |
| O1ii—Cu2A—O4 | 162.9 (6) | O5—C7—C6 | 124.5 (4) |
| O1ii—Cu2A—O4ii | 94.54 (13) | C6—C7—H7 | 117.7 (4) |
| O1—Cu2A—O9A | 95.8 (3) | C8iii—C7—C6 | 119.8 (3) |
| O1ii—Cu2A—O9A | 95.9 (3) | C8iii—C7—H7 | 122.5 (4) |
| O4—Cu2A—O4ii | 82.4 (3) | O6—C8—C6 | 123.1 (4) |
| O4—Cu2A—O9A | 101.3 (4) | O6—C8—C7iii | 116.0 (4) |
| O4ii—Cu2A—O9A | 101.3 (4) | C6—C8—H8 | 119.5 (4) |
| Cu1—O1—Cu2A | 119.8 (2) | C7iii—C8—C6 | 120.9 (3) |
| Cu1—O1—Cu2B | 126.2 (2) | C7iii—C8—H8 | 119.3 (4) |
| C1—O1—Cu1 | 118.55 (18) | O1ii—Cu2B—O1 | 82.6 (3) |
| C1—O1—Cu2A | 112.5 (2) | O1ii—Cu2B—O10Biv | 96.0 (4) |
| C1—O1—Cu2B | 111.9 (2) | O1—Cu2B—O10Biv | 96.0 (4) |
| C2—O2—Cu1v | 128.6 (2) | O4—Cu2B—O1ii | 171.8 (6) |
| C5—O3—Cu1 | 130.6 (2) | O4ii—Cu2B—O1 | 171.8 (6) |
| C5—O4—Cu2A | 125.5 (3) | O4ii—Cu2B—O1ii | 95.64 (10) |
| C5—O4—Cu2B | 132.3 (3) | O4—Cu2B—O1 | 95.64 (10) |
| C7—O5—H5 | 109.5 | O4—Cu2B—O4ii | 84.9 (3) |
| C8—O6—H6 | 109.5 | O4ii—Cu2B—O10Biv | 92.1 (3) |
| C2—O7—Cu1 | 128.2 (2) | O4—Cu2B—O10Biv | 92.1 (3) |
| Cu1—O8—H8A | 114.4 | Cu2A—O9A—H9A | 79.3 (9) |
| Cu1—O8—H8B | 113.8 | H9Bii—O9A—H9Aii | 143.9 (13) |
| H8A—O8—H8B | 99.7 | H10A—O10A—H10Bii | 179 (3) |
| H9B—O9B—H9Bii | 66.6 (10) | H10Aii—O10A—H10Bii | 86.5 (2) |
| H9Bii—O9B—H9Aii | 149 (2) | Cu2Bvi—O10B—H10Aii | 136.5 (5) |
| H9B—O9B—H9Aii | 107.4 (9) | Cu2Bvi—O10B—H10B | 131.3 (8) |
| O1—C1—C1ii | 115.70 (16) | Cu2Bvi—O10B—H10Bii | 131.3 (8) |
| O1—C1—C3 | 124.7 (3) | H10Aii—O10B—H10Bii | 57.8 (6) |
| C3—C1—C1ii | 119.61 (19) | H10B—O10B—H10Aii | 92.2 (10) |
| O2—C2—O7 | 122.1 (3) | H10B—O10B—H10Bii | 67.2 (8) |
| O2—C2—C3 | 117.3 (3) | ||
| Cu1—O1—C1—C1ii | −149.99 (10) | O4—C5—C6—C8 | −6.2 (5) |
| Cu1—O1—C1—C3 | 32.0 (4) | O7—C2—C3—C1 | −19.0 (5) |
| Cu1v—O2—C2—O7 | 15.5 (5) | O7—C2—C3—C4 | 162.2 (3) |
| Cu1v—O2—C2—C3 | −164.9 (2) | C1ii—C1—C3—C2 | −178.2 (2) |
| Cu1—O3—C5—O4 | −47.1 (5) | C1ii—C1—C3—C4 | 0.6 (4) |
| Cu1—O3—C5—C6 | 134.1 (3) | C1—C3—C4—C4ii | −0.6 (4) |
| Cu1—O7—C2—O2 | −178.4 (3) | C2—C3—C4—C4ii | 178.3 (2) |
| Cu1—O7—C2—C3 | 2.0 (5) | C5—C6—C7—O5 | 1.6 (7) |
| Cu2A—O1—C1—C1ii | −3.1 (4) | C5—C6—C7—C8iii | −178.0 (4) |
| Cu2A—O1—C1—C3 | 178.9 (4) | C5—C6—C8—O6 | −1.6 (7) |
| Cu2A—O4—C5—O3 | −0.3 (6) | C5—C6—C8—C7iii | 178.0 (4) |
| Cu2A—O4—C5—C6 | 178.5 (4) | C7—C6—C8—O6 | −179.5 (5) |
| O1—C1—C3—C2 | −0.3 (5) | C7—C6—C8—C7iii | 0.0 (7) |
| O1—C1—C3—C4 | 178.4 (3) | C8—C6—C7—O5 | 179.6 (5) |
| O2—C2—C3—C1 | 161.4 (3) | C8—C6—C7—C8iii | 0.0 (7) |
| O2—C2—C3—C4 | −17.4 (5) | Cu2B—O1—C1—C1ii | 10.5 (4) |
| O3—C5—C6—C7 | −9.4 (5) | Cu2B—O1—C1—C3 | −167.4 (4) |
| O3—C5—C6—C8 | 172.7 (4) | Cu2B—O4—C5—O3 | 13.3 (7) |
| O4—C5—C6—C7 | 171.7 (3) | Cu2B—O4—C5—C6 | −167.8 (4) |
| Symmetry codes: (i) −x+1/2, −y+1, z−1/2; (ii) x, −y+3/2, z; (iii) −x+1, −y+1, −z; (iv) x, y, z+1; (v) −x+1/2, −y+1, z+1/2; (vi) x, y, z−1. |
| [Cu3(C8H2O6)(C8H4O6)(H2O)2]·C2H6O·H2O | Dx = 1.554 Mg m−3 |
| Mr = 680.94 | Mo Kα radiation, λ = 0.71073 Å |
| Orthorhombic, Pnma | Cell parameters from 8615 reflections |
| a = 23.4128 (16) Å | θ = 1.8–27.8° |
| b = 16.7735 (8) Å | µ = 2.24 mm−1 |
| c = 7.4097 (5) Å | T = 173 K |
| V = 2909.9 (3) Å3 | Prism, orange |
| Z = 4 | 0.06 × 0.04 × 0.02 mm |
| F(000) = 1364 |
| XtaLAB AFC10 (RCD3): fixed-chi single diffractometer | 2739 reflections with I > 2σ(I) |
| Detector resolution: 5.8140 pixels mm-1 | Rint = 0.059 |
| ω scans | θmax = 29.6°, θmin = 1.7° |
| Absorption correction: multi-scan (CrysAlisPro; Rigaku, 2023) | h = −27→30 |
| Tmin = 0.697, Tmax = 1.000 | k = −20→22 |
| 32110 measured reflections | l = −10→9 |
| 3725 independent reflections |
| Refinement on F2 | 42 restraints |
| Least-squares matrix: full | Hydrogen site location: mixed |
| R[F2 > 2σ(F2)] = 0.114 | H atoms treated by a mixture of independent and constrained refinement |
| wR(F2) = 0.320 | w = 1/[σ2(Fo2) + (0.1444P)2 + 59.2661P] where P = (Fo2 + 2Fc2)/3 |
| S = 1.08 | (Δ/σ)max = 0.001 |
| 3725 reflections | Δρmax = 2.64 e Å−3 |
| 198 parameters | Δρmin = −1.16 e Å−3 |
Geometry. All esds (except the esd in the dihedral angle between two l.s. planes) are estimated using the full covariance matrix. The cell esds are taken into account individually in the estimation of esds in distances, angles and torsion angles; correlations between esds in cell parameters are only used when they are defined by crystal symmetry. An approximate (isotropic) treatment of cell esds is used for estimating esds involving l.s. planes. |
Refinement. Kα radiation (λ = 1.54187 Å)]. Partially desolvated SIMOF-6 was analysed using a Rigaku FR-X Ultrahigh Brilliance Microfocus RA generator/confocal optics with XtaLAB P200 diffractometer [Mo Kα radiation (λ = 0.71073 Å)]. Data were collected (using a calculated strategy) and processed (including correction for Lorentz, polarization and absorption) using CrysAlis PRO (Rigaku OD, 2025). Structures were solved by dual-space methods (SHELXT2018/2; Sheldrick, 2015a) and refined by full-matrix least-squares against F2 (SHELXL2018/3; Sheldrick, 2015b). |
| x | y | z | Uiso*/Ueq | Occ. (<1) | |
| Cu1 | 0.29605 (5) | 0.56733 (6) | 0.26202 (16) | 0.0277 (4) | |
| Cu2 | 0.35903 (6) | 0.750000 | 0.2711 (2) | 0.0233 (4) | |
| O1 | 0.3078 (3) | 0.6734 (3) | 0.1571 (9) | 0.0279 (14) | |
| O2 | 0.2489 (4) | 0.5361 (4) | 0.0619 (12) | 0.048 (2) | |
| O3 | 0.2026 (3) | 0.5475 (4) | −0.1936 (11) | 0.0371 (17) | |
| O4 | 0.3568 (3) | 0.5779 (4) | 0.4383 (11) | 0.0351 (16) | |
| O5 | 0.4166 (3) | 0.6713 (4) | 0.3352 (11) | 0.0370 (17) | |
| O6 | 0.5236 (6) | 0.6482 (9) | 0.359 (3) | 0.051 (5) | 0.5 |
| H6 | 0.498972 | 0.681979 | 0.388990 | 0.076* | 0.5 |
| O8 | 0.2339 (3) | 0.6240 (4) | 0.4564 (10) | 0.0353 (15) | |
| H8A | 0.202606 | 0.647098 | 0.397826 | 0.053* | |
| H8B | 0.249220 | 0.668082 | 0.516321 | 0.053* | |
| O9 | 0.3092 (5) | 0.750000 | 0.5391 (17) | 0.045 (3) | |
| H9 | 0.2722 (6) | 0.750000 | 0.551 (6) | 0.068* | |
| C1 | 0.2668 (3) | 0.7076 (4) | 0.0569 (12) | 0.0224 (16) | |
| C2 | 0.2275 (4) | 0.6669 (4) | −0.0495 (12) | 0.0230 (16) | |
| C3 | 0.1869 (4) | 0.7092 (5) | −0.1527 (14) | 0.0299 (19) | |
| H3 | 0.159445 | 0.680935 | −0.222343 | 0.036* | |
| C4 | 0.2262 (4) | 0.5787 (5) | −0.0615 (15) | 0.032 (2) | |
| C5 | 0.4062 (4) | 0.6050 (5) | 0.4046 (14) | 0.0302 (19) | |
| C6 | 0.4548 (4) | 0.5512 (5) | 0.4559 (15) | 0.032 (2) | |
| C7 | 0.4437 (4) | 0.4754 (6) | 0.5312 (17) | 0.040 (3) | |
| C8 | 0.5097 (4) | 0.5760 (5) | 0.4290 (16) | 0.037 (2) | |
| C9 | 0.3359 (13) | 0.730 (2) | 0.702 (3) | 0.099 (9) | 0.5 |
| H9A | 0.347174 | 0.673833 | 0.687498 | 0.118* | 0.5 |
| H9B | 0.304724 | 0.730425 | 0.792129 | 0.118* | 0.5 |
| C10 | 0.3849 (10) | 0.768 (4) | 0.796 (3) | 0.088 (19) | 0.5 |
| H10C | 0.386172 | 0.749199 | 0.921599 | 0.132* | 0.5 |
| H10A | 0.380448 | 0.826005 | 0.794755 | 0.132* | 0.5 |
| H10B | 0.420530 | 0.753350 | 0.735125 | 0.132* | 0.5 |
| O10 | 0.1260 (7) | 0.6728 (13) | 0.356 (3) | 0.064 (5) | 0.5 |
| H10D | 0.141075 | 0.719430 | 0.374573 | 0.096* | 0.5 |
| H10E | 0.125126 | 0.650590 | 0.462062 | 0.096* | 0.5 |
| O7A | 0.3929 (7) | 0.4533 (13) | 0.605 (4) | 0.031 (6)* | 0.34 (3) |
| O7B | 0.3915 (10) | 0.4416 (19) | 0.525 (7) | 0.015 (11)* | 0.16 (3) |
| H7A | 0.367540 | 0.486622 | 0.569610 | 0.023* | 0.34 (3) |
| H7B | 0.367990 | 0.476889 | 0.492511 | 0.023* | 0.16 (3) |
| H8 | 0.520210 | 0.626472 | 0.379401 | 1.000* | 0.5 |
| H7 | 0.404706 | 0.460348 | 0.530307 | 1.000* | 0.5 |
| U11 | U22 | U33 | U12 | U13 | U23 | |
| Cu1 | 0.0360 (7) | 0.0066 (5) | 0.0405 (7) | −0.0020 (4) | −0.0078 (5) | 0.0031 (4) |
| Cu2 | 0.0257 (7) | 0.0052 (6) | 0.0391 (9) | 0.000 | −0.0066 (6) | 0.000 |
| O1 | 0.033 (3) | 0.006 (2) | 0.044 (4) | 0.004 (2) | −0.009 (3) | 0.000 (2) |
| O2 | 0.067 (5) | 0.007 (3) | 0.069 (5) | −0.004 (3) | −0.036 (4) | 0.004 (3) |
| O3 | 0.047 (4) | 0.008 (3) | 0.057 (4) | 0.001 (3) | 0.001 (3) | −0.007 (3) |
| O4 | 0.024 (3) | 0.020 (3) | 0.062 (5) | −0.001 (2) | −0.011 (3) | 0.013 (3) |
| O5 | 0.024 (3) | 0.011 (3) | 0.076 (5) | 0.004 (2) | −0.012 (3) | 0.007 (3) |
| O6 | 0.019 (6) | 0.027 (7) | 0.107 (14) | −0.013 (5) | −0.022 (8) | 0.022 (9) |
| O8 | 0.031 (3) | 0.020 (3) | 0.054 (4) | 0.002 (3) | 0.004 (3) | 0.001 (3) |
| O9 | 0.043 (6) | 0.030 (5) | 0.063 (7) | 0.000 | 0.011 (5) | 0.000 |
| C1 | 0.022 (4) | 0.010 (4) | 0.034 (4) | 0.000 (3) | −0.001 (3) | 0.002 (3) |
| C2 | 0.030 (4) | 0.003 (3) | 0.036 (4) | 0.002 (3) | 0.002 (3) | 0.001 (3) |
| C3 | 0.034 (4) | 0.013 (4) | 0.043 (5) | −0.004 (3) | −0.006 (4) | −0.002 (4) |
| C4 | 0.040 (5) | 0.007 (4) | 0.049 (6) | −0.001 (3) | 0.005 (4) | −0.003 (4) |
| C5 | 0.026 (4) | 0.013 (4) | 0.051 (6) | 0.000 (3) | −0.002 (4) | 0.003 (4) |
| C6 | 0.023 (4) | 0.012 (4) | 0.062 (6) | −0.005 (3) | −0.009 (4) | 0.007 (4) |
| C7 | 0.020 (4) | 0.023 (5) | 0.078 (8) | −0.002 (3) | −0.014 (5) | 0.013 (5) |
| C8 | 0.025 (4) | 0.018 (4) | 0.067 (7) | −0.001 (3) | −0.007 (4) | 0.007 (4) |
| C9 | 0.083 (15) | 0.074 (19) | 0.139 (18) | 0.008 (13) | 0.013 (15) | −0.010 (15) |
| C10 | 0.047 (12) | 0.16 (6) | 0.053 (13) | 0.03 (2) | −0.002 (10) | −0.01 (2) |
| O10 | 0.030 (8) | 0.088 (14) | 0.075 (12) | 0.016 (9) | −0.006 (8) | −0.016 (11) |
| Cu1—O1 | 1.961 (6) | C2—C3 | 1.411 (12) |
| Cu1—O2 | 1.920 (7) | C2—C4 | 1.482 (11) |
| Cu1—O3i | 1.954 (6) | C3—C3ii | 1.369 (17) |
| Cu1—O4 | 1.939 (7) | C3—H3 | 0.9500 |
| Cu1—O8 | 2.256 (7) | C5—C6 | 1.501 (12) |
| Cu2—O1ii | 1.950 (6) | C6—C7 | 1.412 (13) |
| Cu2—O1 | 1.950 (6) | C6—C8 | 1.365 (13) |
| Cu2—O5ii | 1.945 (6) | C7—C8iii | 1.421 (13) |
| Cu2—O5 | 1.945 (6) | C7—O7A | 1.361 (18) |
| Cu2—O9 | 2.304 (12) | C7—O7B | 1.35 (2) |
| O1—C1 | 1.342 (10) | C7—H7 | 0.948 (9) |
| O2—C4 | 1.277 (12) | C8—H8 | 0.956 (9) |
| O3—C4 | 1.241 (13) | C9—H9A | 0.9900 |
| O4—C5 | 1.268 (11) | C9—H9B | 0.9900 |
| O5—C5 | 1.249 (11) | C9—C10 | 1.484 (19) |
| O6—H6 | 0.8400 | C10—H10C | 0.9800 |
| O6—C8 | 1.358 (16) | C10—H10A | 0.9800 |
| O8—H8A | 0.9366 | C10—H10B | 0.9800 |
| O8—H8B | 0.9343 | O10—H10D | 0.8698 |
| O9—H9 | 0.870 (10) | O10—H10E | 0.8700 |
| O9—C9 | 1.398 (10) | O7A—H7A | 0.86 (2) |
| C1—C1ii | 1.422 (15) | O7B—H7B | 0.84 (3) |
| C1—C2 | 1.392 (12) | ||
| O1—Cu1—O8 | 87.8 (3) | C3—C2—C4 | 117.1 (8) |
| O2—Cu1—O1 | 91.3 (3) | C2—C3—H3 | 119.9 |
| O2—Cu1—O3i | 82.6 (3) | C3ii—C3—C2 | 120.2 (5) |
| O2—Cu1—O4 | 165.0 (3) | C3ii—C3—H3 | 119.9 |
| O2—Cu1—O8 | 103.7 (3) | O2—C4—C2 | 120.5 (9) |
| O3i—Cu1—O1 | 163.5 (3) | O3—C4—O2 | 121.0 (8) |
| O3i—Cu1—O8 | 108.6 (3) | O3—C4—C2 | 118.6 (9) |
| O4—Cu1—O1 | 94.6 (3) | O4—C5—C6 | 115.2 (8) |
| O4—Cu1—O3i | 88.0 (3) | O5—C5—O4 | 125.3 (8) |
| O4—Cu1—O8 | 90.2 (3) | O5—C5—C6 | 119.5 (8) |
| O1—Cu2—O1ii | 82.4 (3) | C7—C6—C5 | 120.2 (8) |
| O1ii—Cu2—O9 | 93.5 (3) | C8—C6—C5 | 119.5 (8) |
| O1—Cu2—O9 | 93.5 (3) | C8—C6—C7 | 120.3 (8) |
| O5—Cu2—O1ii | 168.2 (3) | C6—C7—C8iii | 119.2 (8) |
| O5ii—Cu2—O1 | 168.2 (3) | C6—C7—H7 | 114.4 (9) |
| O5ii—Cu2—O1ii | 94.9 (3) | C8iii—C7—H7 | 125.5 (9) |
| O5—Cu2—O1 | 94.9 (3) | O7A—C7—C6 | 124.3 (12) |
| O5—Cu2—O5ii | 85.5 (4) | O7A—C7—C8iii | 115.0 (12) |
| O5ii—Cu2—O9 | 98.1 (3) | O7B—C7—C6 | 122.1 (17) |
| O5—Cu2—O9 | 98.1 (3) | O7B—C7—C8iii | 116.6 (16) |
| Cu2—O1—Cu1 | 120.8 (3) | O6—C8—C6 | 123.7 (10) |
| C1—O1—Cu1 | 120.5 (5) | C6—C8—C7iii | 120.5 (9) |
| C1—O1—Cu2 | 113.5 (5) | C6—C8—H8 | 124.7 (9) |
| C4—O2—Cu1 | 129.8 (6) | C7iii—C8—H8 | 114.8 (9) |
| C4—O3—Cu1iv | 122.8 (6) | O9—C9—H9A | 104.6 |
| C5—O4—Cu1 | 124.7 (7) | O9—C9—H9B | 104.6 |
| C5—O5—Cu2 | 124.7 (6) | O9—C9—C10 | 131 (2) |
| C8—O6—H6 | 109.5 | H9A—C9—H9B | 105.7 |
| Cu1—O8—H8A | 112.6 | C10—C9—H9A | 104.6 |
| Cu1—O8—H8B | 113.0 | C10—C9—H9B | 104.6 |
| H8A—O8—H8B | 101.1 | C9—C10—H10C | 109.5 |
| Cu2—O9—H9 | 126 (3) | C9—C10—H10A | 109.5 |
| C9—O9—Cu2 | 121.1 (16) | C9—C10—H10B | 109.5 |
| C9—O9—H9 | 111 (2) | H10C—C10—H10A | 109.5 |
| O1—C1—C1ii | 115.3 (4) | H10C—C10—H10B | 109.5 |
| O1—C1—C2 | 125.3 (7) | H10A—C10—H10B | 109.5 |
| C2—C1—C1ii | 119.4 (5) | H10D—O10—H10E | 104.5 |
| C1—C2—C3 | 120.4 (7) | C7—O7A—H7A | 107.8 (17) |
| C1—C2—C4 | 122.5 (8) | C7—O7B—H7B | 108 (2) |
| Cu1—O1—C1—C1ii | 152.4 (3) | C1ii—C1—C2—C3 | −1.7 (10) |
| Cu1—O1—C1—C2 | −30.5 (12) | C1ii—C1—C2—C4 | 177.8 (7) |
| Cu1—O2—C4—O3 | 171.1 (8) | C1—C2—C3—C3ii | 1.8 (11) |
| Cu1—O2—C4—C2 | −8.8 (15) | C1—C2—C4—O2 | 20.7 (15) |
| Cu1iv—O3—C4—O2 | −5.8 (14) | C1—C2—C4—O3 | −159.2 (9) |
| Cu1iv—O3—C4—C2 | 174.1 (6) | C3—C2—C4—O2 | −159.7 (10) |
| Cu1—O4—C5—O5 | 55.3 (14) | C3—C2—C4—O3 | 20.4 (13) |
| Cu1—O4—C5—C6 | −125.2 (8) | C4—C2—C3—C3ii | −177.8 (6) |
| Cu2—O1—C1—C1ii | −2.1 (6) | C5—C6—C7—C8iii | 177.1 (10) |
| Cu2—O1—C1—C2 | 174.9 (7) | C5—C6—C7—O7A | −18 (2) |
| Cu2—O5—C5—O4 | 2.4 (15) | C5—C6—C7—O7B | 14 (3) |
| Cu2—O5—C5—C6 | −177.1 (7) | C5—C6—C8—O6 | 1 (2) |
| Cu2—O9—C9—C10 | 60 (4) | C5—C6—C8—C7iii | −177.1 (11) |
| O1—C1—C2—C3 | −178.7 (8) | C7—C6—C8—O6 | −179.5 (14) |
| O1—C1—C2—C4 | 0.9 (14) | C7—C6—C8—C7iii | 3 (2) |
| O4—C5—C6—C7 | 1.7 (15) | C8—C6—C7—C8iii | −3 (2) |
| O4—C5—C6—C8 | −178.4 (10) | C8—C6—C7—O7A | 162.5 (19) |
| O5—C5—C6—C7 | −178.8 (10) | C8—C6—C7—O7B | −166 (3) |
| O5—C5—C6—C8 | 1.2 (16) |
| Symmetry codes: (i) −x+1/2, −y+1, z+1/2; (ii) x, −y+3/2, z; (iii) −x+1, −y+1, −z+1; (iv) −x+1/2, −y+1, z−1/2. |
Funding information
Funding for this research was provided by: H2020 European Research Council (grant No. 787073 to Russell E. Morris); Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (grant No. EP/V034138/1; grant No. EP/W034824/1). The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
References
Batten, S. R., Champness, N. R., Chen, X. M., Garcia-Martinez, J., Kitagawa, S., Öhrström, L., O'Keeffe, M., Paik Suh, M. & Reedijk, J. (2013). Pure Appl. Chem. 85, 1715–1724. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Burtch, N. C., Jasuja, H. & Walton, K. S. (2014). Chem. Rev. 114, 10575–10612. Web of Science CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Dolomanov, O. V., Bourhis, L. J., Gildea, R. J., Howard, J. A. K. & Puschmann, H. (2009). J. Appl. Cryst. 42, 339–341. Web of Science CrossRef CAS IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Ettlinger, R., Peña, Q. & Wuttke, S. (2024). Adv. Funct. Mater. 34, 2470251. CrossRef Google Scholar
Freund, R., Canossa, S., Cohen, S. M., Yan, W., Deng, H., Guillerm, V., Eddaoudi, M., Madden, D. G., Fairen–Jimenez, D., Lyu, H., Macreadie, L. K., Ji, Z., Zhang, Y., Wang, B., Haase, F., Wöll, C., Zaremba, O., Andreo, J., Wuttke, S. & Diercks, C. S. (2021). Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 60, 23946–23974. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Gonzalez, M. I., Mason, J. A., Bloch, E. D., Teat, S. J., Gagnon, K. J., Morrison, G. Y., Queen, W. L. & Long, J. R. (2017). Chem. Sci. 8, 4387–4398. Web of Science CSD CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Howarth, A. J., Peters, A. W., Vermeulen, N. A., Wang, T. C., Hupp, J. T. & Farha, O. K. (2017). Chem. Mater. 29, 26–39. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Kitagawa, S. (2017). Acc. Chem. Res. 50, 514–516. Web of Science CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Li, J. R., Ma, Y., McCarthy, M. C., Sculley, J., Yu, J., Jeong, H. K., Balbuena, P. B. & Zhou, H. C. (2011). Coord. Chem. Rev. 255, 1791–1823. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Martínez-Ahumada, E., López-Olvera, A., Jancik, V., Sánchez-Bautista, J. E., González-Zamora, E., Martis, V., Williams, D. R. & Ibarra, I. A. (2020). Organometallics 39, 883–915. Google Scholar
McHugh, L. N., McPherson, M. J., McCormick, L. J., Morris, S. A., Wheatley, P. S., Teat, S. J., McKay, D., Dawson, D. M., Sansome, C. E. F., Ashbrook, S. E., Stone, C. A., Smith, M. W. & Morris, R. E. (2018). Nat. Chem. 10, 1096–1102. Web of Science CSD CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Palmer, D. C. (2015). CrystalMaker. CrystalMaker Software Ltd, Yarnton, England. Google Scholar
Rieth, A. J., Wright, A. M. & Dincă, M. (2019). Nat. Rev. Mater. 4, 708–725. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Rigaku (2023). CrysAlis PRO. Rigaku Corporation, Tokyo, Japan Google Scholar
Rouquerol, J., Llewellyn, P. & Rouquerol, F. (2007). Studies in Surface Science and Catalysis, Vol. 160, edited by P. L. Llewellyn, F. Rodriquez-Reinoso, J. Rouqerol & N. Seaton. pp. 49–56. Amsterdam: Elsevier. Google Scholar
Sameni, M., Moradbeigi, P., Hosseini, S., Ghaderian, S. M. H., Jajarmi, V., Miladipour, A. H., Basati, H., Abbasi, M. & Salehi, M. (2024). Biol. Proced. Online 26, 1–16. Web of Science CrossRef PubMed Google Scholar
Schneemann, A., Bon, V., Schwedler, I., Senkovska, I., Kaskel, S. & Fischer, R. A. (2014). Chem. Soc. Rev. 43, 6062–6096. Web of Science CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Sheldrick, G. M. (2015a). Acta Cryst. A71, 3–8. Web of Science CrossRef IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Sheldrick, G. M. (2015b). Acta Cryst. C71, 3–8. Web of Science CrossRef IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Singh, M. P., Dhumal, N. R., Kim, H. J., Kiefer, J. & Anderson, J. A. (2016). J. Phys. Chem. C 120, 17323–17333. Web of Science CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Stock, N. & Biswas, S. (2012). Chem. Rev. 112, 933–969. Web of Science CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Xu, W. & Yaghi, O. M. (2020). ACS Cent. Sci. 6, 1348–1354. Web of Science CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are cited.

journal menu
access



