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Transition metal clusters acids

Transition metal clusters of jr-acid ligands. R. D. Johnston, Adv. Inorg. Chem. Radiochem., 1970, 13,471-533 (412). [Pg.28]

Transition Metal Cluster with it-Acid Ligands R. D. Johnston... [Pg.439]

Transition metal clusters with n- 63 acid ligands (386)... [Pg.459]

Controllable Assembly, Structures, and Properties of Lanthanide-Transition Metal-Amino Acid Clusters... [Pg.171]

Abstract Amino acids are the basic building blocks in the chemistry of life. This chapter describes the controllable assembly, structures and properties of lathanide(III)-transition metal-amino acid clusters developed recently by our group. The effects on the assembly of several factors of influence, such as presence of a secondary ligand, lanthanides, crystallization conditions, the ratio of metal ions to amino acids, and transition metal ions have been expounded. The dynamic balance of metalloligands and the substitution of weak coordination bonds account for the occurrence of diverse structures in this series of compounds. [Pg.171]

Amino acid is one of the most important biological ligands. Researches on the coordination of metal-amino acid complexes will help us better understand the complicated behavior of the active site in a metal enzyme. Up to now many Ln-amino acid complexes [50] and 1 1 or 1 2 transition metal-amino acid complexes [51] with the structural motifs of mononuclear entity or chain have been synthesized. Recently, a series of polynuclear lanthanide clusters with amino acid as a ligand were reported (most of them display a Ln404-cubane structural motif) [52]. It is also well known that amino acids are useful ligands for the construction of polynuclear copper clusters [53-56], Several studies on polynuclear transition metal clusters with amino acids as ligands, such as [C03] [57,58], [Co2Pt2] [59], [Zn6] [60], and [Fe ] [61] were also reported. [Pg.173]

Except for the factors mentioned above, such as the reactant ratio employed, variation of lanthanide and transition metal, crystallization conditions, and the presence of a secondary ligand, there are several other factors that can affect the controllable assembly of the lanthanide-transition metal-amino acid cluster compounds. [Pg.212]

The use of transition metals or transition metal clusters to act as nodes for the modular self-assembly of diamondoid networks that are sustained by coordinate covalent bonds is also well established. Such architectures are of more than aesthetic appeal. Indeed, such structures have resulted in a class of compound with very interesting bulk and functional properties. Metal-organic diamondoid structures in which the spacer moiety has no center of inversion are predisposed to generate polar networks since there would not be any inherent center of inversion. Pyridine-4-carboxylic acid is such a ligand and bis(isonicotinato)zinc exists as a three-fold diamondoid structure that is thermally stable and inherently polar.33... [Pg.244]

Homologation of Alcohols, Acids, Esters, and Halides Catalyzed by Various Transition Metal Clusters... [Pg.91]

Catalysts which contain reduced transition metal clusters besides acid sites are able to catalyze reactions that are not observed on catalysts exposing one type of site only. The reaction network is inadequately described by models which assume only additivity of catalytic functions and shuttling of intermediates between sites. There is strong evidence that metal clusters and Bronsted sites form metal-proton adducts. These act as "collapsed bifunctional sites" all alkane isomerization steps can take place on such sites during one single residence of the adsorbed molecule. At low temperature, adsorption in a mode reminiscent of a carbenium ion can suppress pure metal catalysis. [Pg.52]

TRANSITION METAL CLUSTERS WITH 7T-ACID LIGANDS... [Pg.473]

Transition metal clusters in which the metals are coordinated to each other and to 7r-acid ligands are known for all the metals of Groups VI, VII, and VIII. Clusters of the formally zero-valent Group IB metals (electron configuration will be included in this survey because of... [Pg.473]


See other pages where Transition metal clusters acids is mentioned: [Pg.84]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.21]    [Pg.178]    [Pg.232]    [Pg.1085]    [Pg.172]    [Pg.1758]    [Pg.90]    [Pg.471]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.507 ]




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