metal-organic compounds
trans-Dichloridotetrakis(pyridine-κN)rhodium(III) chloride methanol tetrasolvate
aDepartment of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, Okayama University, and bDepartment of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Okayama University
*Correspondence e-mail: suzuki@okayama-u.ac.jp
In the solvated title salt, [RhCl2(C5H5N)4]Cl·4CH3OH, the RhIII atom lies on a special position of 2.22 Consequently, the cationic complex has molecular D2 symmetry with a trans disposition for two equivalent Cl− and four equivalent pyridine ligands. The Rh—Cl and Rh—N bond lengths are 2.3452 (7) and 2.064 (2) Å, respectively. The planes of the coordinating pyridine ligands are tilted synchronously, with a dihedral angle of 40.76 (9)° between the least-squares pyridine plane and the coordination plane defined by the RhIII and four pyridine N atoms. The chloride counter-anion is located on a crystallographic .. site, and is surrounded by four methanol molecules to which it is bound in a pseudo-tetrahedral arrangement by O—H⋯Cl hydrogen bonds.
Keywords: crystal structure; rhodium(III) complex; pyridine complex; hydrogen bonds.
CCDC reference: 1874254
Structure description
Mixed-ligand rhodium(III) complexes with chlorido and pyridine ligands have been known since the 1880s (Jörgensen, 1883). Their composition, structures and properties were reexamined very carefully by Gillard & Wilkinson (1964). They concluded that the highest stable species is the trans-dichloridotetrakis(pyridine)rhodium(III) cation. Up to now, several crystal structures of this complex with different counter-anions have been reported: hydrogen dinitrate (Dobinson et al., 1967), dinitratoargentate(I) (Gillard et al., 1990), perchlorate, perrhenate (Vasilchenko et al., 2009), thiocyanate and 2-hydroxybenzoate (Vasil'chenko et al., 2015). However, one of the most simple complex salts, the chloride, has not been reported so far.
The title complex salt, trans-[RhCl2(C5H5N)4]Cl, crystallizes with four molecules of methanol in the Pc2. The RhIII atom lies on a special position of 2.22 (Wyckhoff position 2a), the chlorido ligand (Cl1) on a position with ..2 symmetry (4f), and the non-coordinating Cl− anion (Cl2) is located on a .. site (2d). In addition, the contains a molecule of pyridine (py) and a molecule of methanol, both in general sites. Expanding the symmetry operations gives molecular units of a cationic RhIII complex, trans-[RhCl2(py)4]+, and a tetra(methanol) solvated Cl− anion (Fig. 1). The resulting cationic complex exhibits molecular D2 symmetry. The Rh—Cl and Rh—N bond lengths are 2.3452 (7) and 2.064 (2) Å, respectively. The Cl—Rh—N and N—Rh—N bond angles are close, but not strictly equal, to 90°. Similar to previously reported structures (Dobinson et al., 1967; Gillard et al., 1990; Vasilchenko et al., 2009; Vasil'chenko et al., 2015), the planes of the coordinating pyridine are tilted synchronously with respect to the RhN4 coordination plane. The dihedral angle between the least-squares pyridine plane and the coordination plane defined by the Rh and four N atoms is 40.76 (9)°. The hydrogen-bonded anionic [Cl(CH3OH)4]− unit exhibits a pseudo-tetrahedral arrangement (Fig. 1, Table 1). The packing of the molecular entities in the is shown in Fig. 2.
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Synthesis and crystallization
The hydrated complex chloride, trans-[RhCl2(py)4]Cl·5H2O, was prepared from RhCl3·3H2O and pyridine in refluxing water, according to the method described in our previous paper (Suzuki et al., 1995). The product was recrystallized from methanol, affording yellow platelet methanol tetrasolvate crystals of the title compound.
Refinement
Crystal data, data collection and structure .
details are summarized in Table 2Structural data
CCDC reference: 1874254
https://doi.org/10.1107/S2414314618014827/wm4088sup1.cif
contains datablock I. DOI:Structure factors: contains datablock I. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2414314618014827/wm4088Isup2.hkl
Data collection: RAPID-AUTO (Rigaku, 2006); cell
RAPID-AUTO (Rigaku, 2006); data reduction: RAPID-AUTO (Rigaku, 2006); program(s) used to solve structure: SIR2014 (Burla et al., 2012); program(s) used to refine structure: SHELXL2014 (Sheldrick, 2015); molecular graphics: CrystalMaker (Palmer et al., 2017); software used to prepare material for publication: SHELXL2014 (Sheldrick, 2015).[RhCl2(C5H5N)4]Cl·4CH4O | Dx = 1.416 Mg m−3 |
Mr = 653.83 | Mo Kα radiation, λ = 0.71075 Å |
Tetragonal, P4c2 | Cell parameters from 13381 reflections |
a = 7.6130 (7) Å | θ = 3.1–27.5° |
c = 26.461 (3) Å | µ = 0.85 mm−1 |
V = 1533.7 (3) Å3 | T = 163 K |
Z = 2 | Platelet, yellow |
F(000) = 672 | 0.70 × 0.60 × 0.30 mm |
Rigaku R-AXIS RAPID diffractometer | 1605 reflections with I > 2σ(I) |
Detector resolution: 10.00 pixels mm-1 | Rint = 0.038 |
ω scans | θmax = 27.5°, θmin = 3.1° |
Absorption correction: numerical (NUMABS; Higashi, 1999) | h = −9→9 |
Tmin = 0.611, Tmax = 0.775 | k = −8→9 |
13753 measured reflections | l = −34→34 |
1749 independent reflections |
Refinement on F2 | Secondary atom site location: difference Fourier map |
Least-squares matrix: full | Hydrogen site location: inferred from neighbouring sites |
R[F2 > 2σ(F2)] = 0.022 | H-atom parameters constrained |
wR(F2) = 0.047 | w = 1/[σ2(Fo2) + (0.0221P)2 + 0.2836P] where P = (Fo2 + 2Fc2)/3 |
S = 1.03 | (Δ/σ)max < 0.001 |
1749 reflections | Δρmax = 0.22 e Å−3 |
85 parameters | Δρmin = −0.47 e Å−3 |
0 restraints | Absolute structure: Flack x determined using 652 quotients [(I+)-(I-)]/[(I+)+(I-)] (Parsons et al., 2013) |
Primary atom site location: structure-invariant direct methods | Absolute structure parameter: −0.043 (19) |
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. The H atom of the methanol hydroxy group was located from a difference Fourier map. Afterwards it was refined using a riding model, with O—H = 0.84 Å. For other H atoms, C—H = 0.95 (aromatic) or 0.98 (methyl) Å, with Uiso(H) = 1.2 Ueq(C, O) were applied. |
x | y | z | Uiso*/Ueq | ||
Rh1 | 0.0000 | 0.0000 | 0.2500 | 0.02029 (9) | |
Cl1 | 0.21783 (6) | −0.21783 (6) | 0.2500 | 0.02777 (16) | |
Cl2 | 0.5000 | 0.5000 | 0.0000 | 0.0462 (3) | |
O1 | 0.7689 (6) | 0.2828 (5) | 0.06260 (15) | 0.0971 (16) | |
H1 | 0.7245 | 0.3530 | 0.0417 | 0.116* | |
N1 | 0.1360 (4) | 0.1368 (4) | 0.19521 (6) | 0.0238 (3) | |
C1 | 0.0516 (4) | 0.2088 (4) | 0.15529 (10) | 0.0285 (6) | |
H1A | −0.0724 | 0.1973 | 0.1529 | 0.034* | |
C2 | 0.1408 (4) | 0.2984 (4) | 0.11805 (11) | 0.0347 (6) | |
H2 | 0.0782 | 0.3457 | 0.0901 | 0.042* | |
C3 | 0.3185 (6) | 0.3196 (6) | 0.12101 (9) | 0.0406 (6) | |
H3 | 0.3802 | 0.3823 | 0.0956 | 0.049* | |
C4 | 0.4079 (4) | 0.2473 (4) | 0.16217 (12) | 0.0376 (7) | |
H4 | 0.5316 | 0.2598 | 0.1653 | 0.045* | |
C5 | 0.3125 (4) | 0.1571 (4) | 0.19829 (10) | 0.0296 (6) | |
H5 | 0.3730 | 0.1075 | 0.2263 | 0.035* | |
C6 | 0.7411 (7) | 0.1140 (7) | 0.0467 (2) | 0.0807 (15) | |
H6A | 0.7246 | 0.1127 | 0.0100 | 0.097* | |
H6B | 0.6359 | 0.0669 | 0.0632 | 0.097* | |
H6C | 0.8429 | 0.0415 | 0.0556 | 0.097* |
U11 | U22 | U33 | U12 | U13 | U23 | |
Rh1 | 0.02015 (11) | 0.02015 (11) | 0.02056 (14) | 0.00233 (13) | 0.000 | 0.000 |
Cl1 | 0.0266 (2) | 0.0266 (2) | 0.0301 (3) | 0.0081 (3) | 0.0019 (6) | 0.0019 (6) |
Cl2 | 0.0557 (4) | 0.0557 (4) | 0.0273 (5) | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 |
O1 | 0.095 (3) | 0.082 (3) | 0.115 (3) | 0.028 (3) | −0.058 (3) | −0.027 (2) |
N1 | 0.0238 (19) | 0.0239 (19) | 0.0236 (8) | 0.0016 (7) | 0.0009 (14) | −0.0002 (13) |
C1 | 0.0256 (13) | 0.0294 (14) | 0.0305 (13) | 0.0026 (10) | −0.0050 (10) | 0.0010 (11) |
C2 | 0.0383 (16) | 0.0362 (16) | 0.0297 (13) | 0.0023 (13) | −0.0047 (12) | 0.0102 (13) |
C3 | 0.044 (3) | 0.039 (3) | 0.0387 (12) | −0.0061 (11) | 0.006 (2) | 0.014 (2) |
C4 | 0.0258 (16) | 0.0442 (19) | 0.0428 (15) | −0.0060 (13) | −0.0012 (13) | 0.0104 (14) |
C5 | 0.0243 (14) | 0.0344 (15) | 0.0300 (12) | 0.0014 (11) | −0.0031 (11) | 0.0063 (11) |
C6 | 0.072 (3) | 0.059 (3) | 0.111 (4) | 0.013 (3) | −0.009 (3) | 0.002 (3) |
Rh1—N1 | 2.0638 (17) | C1—H1A | 0.9500 |
Rh1—N1i | 2.0638 (17) | C2—C3 | 1.365 (5) |
Rh1—N1ii | 2.0638 (17) | C2—H2 | 0.9500 |
Rh1—N1iii | 2.0638 (17) | C3—C4 | 1.397 (5) |
Rh1—Cl1 | 2.3452 (7) | C3—H3 | 0.9500 |
Rh1—Cl1ii | 2.3452 (7) | C4—C5 | 1.383 (4) |
O1—C6 | 1.368 (6) | C4—H4 | 0.9500 |
O1—H1 | 0.8400 | C5—H5 | 0.9500 |
N1—C5 | 1.355 (4) | C6—H6A | 0.9800 |
N1—C1 | 1.352 (4) | C6—H6B | 0.9800 |
C1—C2 | 1.377 (4) | C6—H6C | 0.9800 |
N1—Rh1—N1i | 89.26 (10) | N1—C1—H1A | 119.2 |
N1—Rh1—N1ii | 90.74 (10) | C2—C1—H1A | 119.2 |
N1i—Rh1—N1ii | 179.7 (2) | C3—C2—C1 | 120.4 (3) |
N1—Rh1—N1iii | 179.7 (2) | C3—C2—H2 | 119.8 |
N1i—Rh1—N1iii | 90.74 (10) | C1—C2—H2 | 119.8 |
N1ii—Rh1—N1iii | 89.26 (10) | C2—C3—C4 | 118.8 (2) |
N1—Rh1—Cl1 | 90.13 (12) | C2—C3—H3 | 120.6 |
N1i—Rh1—Cl1 | 89.87 (12) | C4—C3—H3 | 120.6 |
N1ii—Rh1—Cl1 | 89.87 (12) | C5—C4—C3 | 118.6 (3) |
N1iii—Rh1—Cl1 | 90.13 (12) | C5—C4—H4 | 120.7 |
N1—Rh1—Cl1ii | 89.87 (12) | C3—C4—H4 | 120.7 |
N1i—Rh1—Cl1ii | 90.13 (12) | N1—C5—C4 | 122.4 (3) |
N1ii—Rh1—Cl1ii | 90.13 (12) | N1—C5—H5 | 118.8 |
N1iii—Rh1—Cl1ii | 89.87 (12) | C4—C5—H5 | 118.8 |
Cl1—Rh1—Cl1ii | 180.0 | O1—C6—H6A | 109.5 |
C6—O1—H1 | 109.5 | O1—C6—H6B | 109.5 |
C5—N1—C1 | 118.2 (2) | H6A—C6—H6B | 109.5 |
C5—N1—Rh1 | 120.8 (2) | O1—C6—H6C | 109.5 |
C1—N1—Rh1 | 121.0 (2) | H6A—C6—H6C | 109.5 |
N1—C1—C2 | 121.7 (3) | H6B—C6—H6C | 109.5 |
C5—N1—C1—C2 | 1.0 (5) | C2—C3—C4—C5 | 0.0 (6) |
Rh1—N1—C1—C2 | −179.1 (2) | C1—N1—C5—C4 | −0.3 (5) |
N1—C1—C2—C3 | −1.2 (6) | Rh1—N1—C5—C4 | 179.7 (2) |
C1—C2—C3—C4 | 0.7 (6) | C3—C4—C5—N1 | −0.2 (5) |
Symmetry codes: (i) y, x, −z+1/2; (ii) −x, −y, z; (iii) −y, −x, −z+1/2. |
Funding information
Funding for this research was provided by: Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research No. 18K05146 from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology, Japan.
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