research communications
Synthesis and of poly[(2,6-dimethylpyrazine-κN4)(μ3-thiocyanato-κ3N:S:S)copper(I)]
aInstitut für Anorganische Chemie, Universität Kiel, Max-Eyth.-Str. 2, 24118 Kiel, Germany
*Correspondence e-mail: [email protected]
Crystals of the title compound, [Cu(NCS)(C6H8N2)]n (C6H8N2 = 2,6-dimethylpyrazine), were prepared by the reaction of CuNCS and 2,6-dimethylpyrazine in acetonitrile. The consists of one CuI cation, one thiocyanate anion and one 2,6-dimethylpyrazine ligand with all atoms lying on general positions. The copper cations are tetrahedrally coordinated by two S- and one N-bonded thiocyanate anions and one 2,6-dimethylpyrazine ligand, which s coordinated to the metal center with the N atom that is not adjacent to the methyl groups. The copper cations are linked by the μ-1,3,3 (N,S,S) bridging thiocyanate anions into layers that lie parallel to the ac plane. The layers are stacked perpendicular to the b-axis direction and are separated by the 2,6-dimethylpyrazine ligands. The title crystal structure is compared with those of related CuNCS compounds with isomeric dimethylpyrazine ligands.
CCDC reference: 2532015
1. Chemical context
Coordination compounds based on copper(I) halides with chloride, bromide and iodide anions and N-donor coligands show an extremely large structural variability (e.g., Kromp & Sheldrick, 1999
; Näther et al., 2001
, 2002
; Li et al., 2005
; Peng et al., 2010
). They usually consist of a variety of CuX substructures such as monomeric and dimeric units, chains or layers that can be further linked if bridging ligands are used. This might also be one reason why several polymorphs or isomers are reported (Näther & Jess, 2003
; Park et al., 2012
; Peng et al., 2010
; Näther et al., 2003
). For many of these compounds, a different ratio between the copper(I) halide and the N-donor coligands is observed and thermal treatment of the coligand-rich compounds usually leads to the transformation into coligand-deficient compounds that show more condensed CuX substructures (Näther & Jess, 2001
, 2002
).
Such coordination compounds can also be prepared with copper(I) pseudohalides such as cyanide, azide or thiocyanate anions and many of them are reported in the literature because of their luminescence properties (Chesnut et al., 1999
; Lemos et al., 2001
; Starosta et al., 2012
; Nitsch et al., 2015
). As is the case for the copper(I) halide coordination compounds, they also show typical CuX substructures (X = pseudohalide), which, especially for are very often more complicated than those in copper(I) halides. The different CuX substructures can further be connected into more condensed networks if bridging coligands such as, for example, pyrazine derivatives are used. If a database search is limited to the isomeric dimethylpyrazine ligands and copper(I), a number of compounds with cyanide, azide and thiocyanate anions are reported in the CSD (Version 5.43, 2025; Groom et al., 2016
) using CONQUEST (Bruno et al., 2002
).
With azide anions, no copper(I) compounds with 2,3-dimethylpyrazine are reported but one three-dimensional compound with the composition Cu2(N3)2(2,5-dimethylpyrazine) is known that shows a complicated Cu–azide substructure, in which the azide anions act as μ-1,1,3 bridging ligands (Guang et al., 2012
). Furthermore, Cu2(N3)2(2,6-dimethylpyrazine) is also found (Fan et al., 2015a
,b
).
Copper(I) compounds with cyanide anions are reported with all three isomers of dimethylpyrazine. These include Cu3(CN)3(2,3-dimethylpyrazine) (Greve & Näther, 2004
), Cu6(CN)6(2,3-dimethylpyrazine) (Chesnut et al., 2001
) and Cu2(CN)2(2,5-dimethylpyrazine) (Chesnut et al., 2001
). Finally, two isomers of Cu2(CN)2(2,6-dimethylpyrazine) are reported. In one of them, the copper cations are linked by bridging cyanide anions into Cu4(CN)4 units that condense into layers by way of Cu2(CN)2 four-membered rings (Näther, 2025
), whereas in the second modification a one-dimensional copper(I) cyanide network is found that consists of alternating twelve- and four-membered rings (Chesnut et al., 2001
).
With thiocyanate anions and 2,5-dimethylpyrazine, a compound with the composition Cu2(NCS)2(2,5-dimethylpyrazine) is found, in which CuNCS layers are observed, that are linked by the 2,5-dimethylpyrazine ligands into a three-dimensional network (Näther et al., 2003
; Otieno et al., 2003
). A three-dimensional structure is also found for Cu2(NCS)2(2,3-dimethylpyrazine), even if the layer topology is different from that of the 2,5-dimethylpyrazine compound (Näther et al., 2003
). Compounds with a 1:1 ratio of copper(I) thiocyanate and 2,6-dimethylpyrazine are unknown and we therefore tried to prepare such compounds by the reaction of CuNCS and 2,6-dimethylpyrazine. In the course of these investigations we obtained crystals of the title compound, (I), that were characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction.
2. Structural commentary
The of (I), Cu(NCS)(C6H8N2) (C6H8N2 = 2,6-dimethylpyrazine), consists of one copper(I) cation, one thiocyanate anion and one 2,6-dimethylpyrazine ligand, with all of the atoms located in general positions (Fig. 1
) in space group P21/c. The metal cations are fourfold coordinated by one N- and two S-bonded thiocyanate anions and one 2,6-dimethylpyrazine ligand. Because of steric repulsion between the metal cation and the methyl groups of the 2,6-dimethylpyrazine ligand, this ligand is only coordinated with the N atom that does not lie between the two methyl groups (Fig. 1
). The two Cu—S bond lengths are only slightly different and the bond angles deviate from the ideal values, which shows that the tetrahedra are slightly distorted (Table 1
). As expected, the C—N—Cu angle is close to linearity, whereas the C—S—Cu angles roughly correspond to a tetrahedral angle (Table 1
).
|
| Figure 1 The asymmetric unit of (I) expanded to show the full metal coordination sphere with labeling of selected atoms and displacement ellipsoids drawn at the 50% probability level. Symmetry codes: (i) x − 1, −y + |
In the extended structure, the copper(I) cations are connected by μ-1,1,3(S,S,N)-bridging thiocyanate anions into ten-membered rings built up of three cations and three thiocyanate anions, condensing into corrugated layers that lie parallel to the ac plane (Fig. 2
). It is noted that this layer topology is completely different from that in Cu2(NCS)2(2,3-dimethylpyrazine) (Näther et al., 2003
), where tetranuclear units built up of four copper(I) cations and four thiocyanate anions are observed, which condense into layers by way of Cu2S2 rings (Fig. 3
: top). In contrast, in Cu2(NCS)2(2,5-dimethylpyrazine) (Näther et al., 2003
; Otieno et al., 2003
), ten-membered rings are also found but the orientation of the two thiocyanate anions within these rings is reversed and the rings are therefore more distorted (Fig. 3
: bottom).
| Figure 2 Crystal structure of (I) with a view onto the CuNCS layers along the crystallographic b-axis direction. The 2,6-dimethylpyrazine ligands are omitted for clarity. |
| Figure 3 View of the CuNCS networks in Cu2(NCS)2(2,3-dimethylpyrazine) (top) and Cu2(NCS)2(2,5-dimethylpyrazine) (bottom) reported in the literature (Näther et al., 2003 |
Concerning the overall structural discussion, it must be kept in mind that in the 2,3- and 2,5-dimethylpyrazine compounds, the ratio between the CuNCS component and the dimethylpyrazine derivative is different, but this difference only originates from the fact that the coligand is only terminally coordinating in (I), whereas it act as a bridging ligand in the compounds with the two other isomers. In this context, it is noted that no CuNCS compounds with 2,3- or 2,5-dimethylpyrazine are reported, in which the ratio between CuNCS and coligand is identical to that in (I), which indicates that for these ligands a terminal coordination is not favored. In contrast, in (I), one of the coordinating N atoms of the 2,6-dimethylpyrazine ligand is shielded by the two neighbouring methyl groups, which means that a compound with a bridging coordination of the neutral coligand, similar to that in the thiocyanate compounds with 2,3- and 2,5-dimethylpyrazine, might not exist.
3. Supramolecular features
The layers in (I) are stacked perpendicular to the b-axis direction and are separated by the 2,6-dimethylpyrazine ligands (Fig. 4
). The coligands of neighboring layers point towards each other, which means that the layers are only linked by van der Waals interactions. There are no directional intermolecular interactions. This is completely different to the 2,3- and 2,5-dimethylpyrazine compounds Cu2(NCS)2(2,3-dimethylpyrazine) and Cu2(NCS)2(2,5-dimethylpyrazine) in which the layers are connected by bridging 2,3- and 2,5-dimethylpyrazine ligands into a three-dimensional network (Näther et al., 2003
; Otieno et al., 2003
). As mentioned above, this might be traced back to the fact that in 2,3- and 2,5-dimethylpyrazine, only one methyl group is adjacent to the coordinating N atom, whereas in 2,6-dimethylpyrazine the two methyl groups effectively shield one of the N atoms, which makes metal coordination much more difficult.
| Figure 4 Crystal structure of (I) with a view along the crystallographic a-axis direction. |
4. Database survey
As mentioned above, with 2,6-dimethylpyrazine and copper(I) thiocyanate no compounds are reported but there is one mixed copper(I/II) pseudohalide compound with the composition [Cu8ICu2II(CN)4(NCS)8(2,6-dimethylpyrazine)7] that shows a three-dimensional coordination network (Jess & Näther, 2006
).
With copper(I) halides, two compounds with 2,6-dimethylpyrazine are known. This includes Cu2Cl2(2,6-dimethylpyrazine), in which the copper cations are tetrahedrally coordinated by three chloride anions and one 2,6-dimethylpyrazine ligand and are linked by μ-1,1 bridging chloride anions into double chains that are further connected into layers by bridging 2,6-dimethylpyrazine ligands (Fan et al., 2015![]()
). CuI(2,6-dimethylpyrazine) shows a structure similar to that of Cu2Cl2(2,6-dimethylpyrazine) mentioned above, but in this compound, the 2,6-dimethylpyrazine ligand is only terminally coordinated (Kitada & Ishida, 2014
; Zhang et al., 2014
).
Finally, it is noted that with divalent copper(II) cations, two different polymorphs with the composition CuBr2(2,6-dimethylpyrazine) are reported, in which the copper cations are linked into chains by bridging 2,6-dimethylpyrazine ligands (Ding et al., 2021
).
5. Synthesis and crystallization
Copper(I) thiocyanate and 2,6-dimethylpyrazine were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich: 1.000 mmol (121.6 mg) of copper(I) thiocyanate and 1.000 mmol (108.1 mg) of 2,6-dimethylpyrazine were reacted in 3 ml of acetonitrile. Within 3 d, colourless blocks of (I) suitable for single crystal X-ray diffraction were obtained.
6. Refinement
Crystal data, data collection and structure details are summarized in Table 2
. The C—H hydrogen atoms were positioned with idealized geometry (methyl H atoms allowed to rotate but not to tip) and were refined isotropically with Uiso(H) = 1.2Ueq(C) (1.5 for methyl H atoms).
|
Supporting information
CCDC reference: 2532015
contains datablock I. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989026001866/hb8197sup1.cif
Structure factors: contains datablock I. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2056989026001866/hb8197Isup2.hkl
| [Cu(NCS)(C6H8N2)] | F(000) = 464 |
| Mr = 229.76 | Dx = 1.702 Mg m−3 |
| Monoclinic, P21/c | Mo Kα radiation, λ = 0.71073 Å |
| a = 5.6765 (4) Å | Cell parameters from 5598 reflections |
| b = 23.4382 (14) Å | θ = 6.3–56.0° |
| c = 6.9655 (6) Å | µ = 2.61 mm−1 |
| β = 104.620 (9)° | T = 200 K |
| V = 896.73 (12) Å3 | Block, colorless |
| Z = 4 | 0.20 × 0.19 × 0.15 mm |
| Stoe IPDS-II diffractometer | 1704 reflections with I > 2σ(I) |
| ω scans | Rint = 0.047 |
| Absorption correction: numerical (X-Red and X-Shape; Stoe, 2008) | θmax = 28.0°, θmin = 3.2° |
| Tmin = 0.470, Tmax = 0.620 | h = −7→7 |
| 6594 measured reflections | k = −29→30 |
| 2163 independent reflections | l = −9→9 |
| Refinement on F2 | Hydrogen site location: inferred from neighbouring sites |
| Least-squares matrix: full | H-atom parameters constrained |
| R[F2 > 2σ(F2)] = 0.036 | w = 1/[σ2(Fo2) + (0.0586P)2] where P = (Fo2 + 2Fc2)/3 |
| wR(F2) = 0.096 | (Δ/σ)max = 0.001 |
| S = 1.03 | Δρmax = 0.49 e Å−3 |
| 2163 reflections | Δρmin = −0.62 e Å−3 |
| 112 parameters | Extinction correction: SHELXL-2016/6 (Sheldrick 2015b), Fc*=kFc[1+0.001xFc2λ3/sin(2θ)]-1/4 |
| 0 restraints | Extinction coefficient: 0.010 (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. |
| x | y | z | Uiso*/Ueq | ||
| Cu1 | 0.69476 (6) | 0.27873 (2) | 0.52022 (5) | 0.02275 (15) | |
| N1 | 0.7931 (5) | 0.43852 (12) | 0.1025 (4) | 0.0296 (6) | |
| C1 | 0.5987 (6) | 0.40441 (13) | 0.0613 (4) | 0.0281 (6) | |
| C2 | 0.5679 (6) | 0.36229 (13) | 0.1940 (4) | 0.0252 (6) | |
| H2 | 0.423880 | 0.339862 | 0.163200 | 0.030* | |
| N2 | 0.7354 (4) | 0.35266 (11) | 0.3629 (3) | 0.0226 (5) | |
| C3 | 0.9327 (5) | 0.38613 (14) | 0.4014 (4) | 0.0259 (6) | |
| H3 | 1.057102 | 0.379901 | 0.519348 | 0.031* | |
| C4 | 0.9611 (6) | 0.42982 (13) | 0.2736 (4) | 0.0253 (6) | |
| C5 | 0.4140 (8) | 0.41223 (19) | −0.1321 (6) | 0.0507 (11) | |
| H5A | 0.396766 | 0.452951 | −0.164523 | 0.076* | |
| H5B | 0.256982 | 0.396923 | −0.121909 | 0.076* | |
| H5C | 0.467254 | 0.391925 | −0.236799 | 0.076* | |
| C6 | 1.1765 (7) | 0.46912 (17) | 0.3216 (5) | 0.0373 (8) | |
| H6A | 1.226703 | 0.477786 | 0.200078 | 0.056* | |
| H6B | 1.311239 | 0.450682 | 0.417527 | 0.056* | |
| H6C | 1.132326 | 0.504568 | 0.378469 | 0.056* | |
| S1 | 0.88125 (12) | 0.29030 (3) | 0.85550 (10) | 0.02064 (18) | |
| C11 | 1.1536 (5) | 0.25913 (13) | 0.9018 (4) | 0.0187 (5) | |
| N11 | 1.3454 (4) | 0.23893 (12) | 0.9428 (3) | 0.0243 (5) |
| U11 | U22 | U33 | U12 | U13 | U23 | |
| Cu1 | 0.01201 (19) | 0.0303 (2) | 0.0246 (2) | −0.00085 (13) | 0.00210 (13) | 0.00651 (13) |
| N1 | 0.0388 (15) | 0.0256 (14) | 0.0223 (12) | −0.0007 (11) | 0.0039 (11) | 0.0035 (9) |
| C1 | 0.0351 (16) | 0.0231 (16) | 0.0208 (13) | 0.0000 (13) | −0.0028 (12) | 0.0016 (11) |
| C2 | 0.0276 (14) | 0.0204 (15) | 0.0236 (13) | 0.0012 (11) | −0.0012 (11) | 0.0008 (11) |
| N2 | 0.0247 (12) | 0.0197 (12) | 0.0200 (11) | −0.0019 (9) | −0.0005 (9) | 0.0043 (9) |
| C3 | 0.0243 (14) | 0.0271 (16) | 0.0218 (13) | −0.0043 (11) | −0.0023 (11) | 0.0030 (10) |
| C4 | 0.0263 (15) | 0.0246 (15) | 0.0246 (14) | −0.0034 (12) | 0.0053 (11) | −0.0017 (11) |
| C5 | 0.057 (2) | 0.049 (2) | 0.0310 (18) | −0.008 (2) | −0.0170 (17) | 0.0144 (16) |
| C6 | 0.0353 (18) | 0.038 (2) | 0.0378 (18) | −0.0144 (15) | 0.0071 (14) | 0.0014 (13) |
| S1 | 0.0139 (3) | 0.0280 (4) | 0.0194 (3) | 0.0041 (2) | 0.0030 (2) | 0.0007 (2) |
| C11 | 0.0148 (12) | 0.0262 (14) | 0.0146 (11) | −0.0048 (10) | 0.0031 (9) | −0.0029 (9) |
| N11 | 0.0114 (10) | 0.0392 (15) | 0.0212 (11) | 0.0020 (10) | 0.0021 (8) | −0.0027 (10) |
| Cu1—N11i | 1.963 (2) | C3—C4 | 1.393 (4) |
| Cu1—N2 | 2.094 (2) | C3—H3 | 0.9500 |
| Cu1—S1 | 2.3238 (8) | C4—C6 | 1.500 (4) |
| Cu1—S1ii | 2.3809 (8) | C5—H5A | 0.9800 |
| N1—C1 | 1.334 (4) | C5—H5B | 0.9800 |
| N1—C4 | 1.341 (4) | C5—H5C | 0.9800 |
| C1—C2 | 1.393 (4) | C6—H6A | 0.9800 |
| C1—C5 | 1.495 (5) | C6—H6B | 0.9800 |
| C2—N2 | 1.332 (4) | C6—H6C | 0.9800 |
| C2—H2 | 0.9500 | S1—C11 | 1.666 (3) |
| N2—C3 | 1.338 (4) | C11—N11 | 1.155 (4) |
| N11i—Cu1—N2 | 105.53 (10) | N1—C4—C6 | 117.5 (3) |
| N11i—Cu1—S1 | 118.22 (7) | C3—C4—C6 | 121.9 (3) |
| N2—Cu1—S1 | 110.30 (7) | C1—C5—H5A | 109.5 |
| N11i—Cu1—S1ii | 105.40 (8) | C1—C5—H5B | 109.5 |
| N2—Cu1—S1ii | 100.90 (7) | H5A—C5—H5B | 109.5 |
| S1—Cu1—S1ii | 114.74 (3) | C1—C5—H5C | 109.5 |
| C1—N1—C4 | 117.7 (3) | H5A—C5—H5C | 109.5 |
| N1—C1—C2 | 121.2 (3) | H5B—C5—H5C | 109.5 |
| N1—C1—C5 | 118.3 (3) | C4—C6—H6A | 109.5 |
| C2—C1—C5 | 120.5 (3) | C4—C6—H6B | 109.5 |
| N2—C2—C1 | 121.7 (3) | H6A—C6—H6B | 109.5 |
| N2—C2—H2 | 119.2 | C4—C6—H6C | 109.5 |
| C1—C2—H2 | 119.2 | H6A—C6—H6C | 109.5 |
| C2—N2—C3 | 116.9 (3) | H6B—C6—H6C | 109.5 |
| C2—N2—Cu1 | 117.0 (2) | C11—S1—Cu1 | 107.96 (9) |
| C3—N2—Cu1 | 125.3 (2) | C11—S1—Cu1iii | 96.46 (10) |
| N2—C3—C4 | 122.0 (3) | Cu1—S1—Cu1iii | 105.06 (3) |
| N2—C3—H3 | 119.0 | N11—C11—S1 | 176.6 (3) |
| C4—C3—H3 | 119.0 | C11—N11—Cu1iv | 168.0 (3) |
| N1—C4—C3 | 120.6 (3) | ||
| C4—N1—C1—C2 | 1.8 (5) | C2—N2—C3—C4 | 1.2 (4) |
| C4—N1—C1—C5 | −177.9 (3) | Cu1—N2—C3—C4 | 170.5 (2) |
| N1—C1—C2—N2 | −2.9 (5) | C1—N1—C4—C3 | 0.7 (5) |
| C5—C1—C2—N2 | 176.7 (3) | C1—N1—C4—C6 | −178.6 (3) |
| C1—C2—N2—C3 | 1.3 (4) | N2—C3—C4—N1 | −2.3 (5) |
| C1—C2—N2—Cu1 | −168.9 (2) | N2—C3—C4—C6 | 177.0 (3) |
| Symmetry codes: (i) x−1, −y+1/2, z−1/2; (ii) x, −y+1/2, z−1/2; (iii) x, −y+1/2, z+1/2; (iv) x+1, −y+1/2, z+1/2. |
Acknowledgements
Financial support by the State of Schleswig-Holstein is gratefully acknowledged.
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