Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.56, No.14, 8554-8561, 2017
A Hexanuclear Iron(II) Layer with Two Square-Planar FeO4 Units Spanned by Tetrasiloxide Ligands: Mimicking of Minerals and Catalysts
A hexanuclear iron(II) siloxide complex has been prepared by reacting an incompletely condensed silsesquioxane first with NaOMe and then with Fe(OTf)(2). In the process of product formation, the siloxane framework undergoes a transformation and it was shown that this happens already upon addition of base: Treatment of the ligand precursor with NaOMe leads to a completely condensed silsesquioxane cage with 12 Si atoms that is composed of 2 equiv of the tetrasiloxide ligands found in the product complex. Its iron centers form a two-dimensional array reminiscent of the situations found in minerals and two-dimensional oxide films caused by segregation of FeOx and silica. As the hexairon(II) assembly contains two high-spin square-planar FeO4 units-suggested to represent the active sites in Fe-zeolites, which react with N2O to generate strongly oxidizing sites-it was treated with Me3NO. This led to the oxidation of two of the iron centers to the oxidation state +III and elimination of one iron ion, so that a pentanuclear, mixed valent iron siloxide was formed. All complexes were fully characterized.