Zinc and Cobalt Coordination Polymers Based on the Redox‐Active Linker 4,4′‐(Phenazine‐5,10‐diyl)dibenzoate: Structures and Electrochemical Properties
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The two novel Zn- and Co-based coordination polymers with the redox-active (H)PZDB−/2− linker exhibit oxidative color changes due to radical cation formation of the linker as confirmed by spectroelectrochemical analysis.
The novel coordination polymers [Zn(PZDB)(DEF)2]n (Zn-PZDB) and [Co(HPZDB)2(DEF)2]n (Co-HPZDB) (H2PZDB = 4,4′-(phenazine-5,10-diyl)dibenzoic acid, DEF = N,N-diethylformamide) are synthesized solvothermally from the metal nitrate salts and the linear H2PZDB linker with the redox-active phenazine-5,10-diyl core. Zn–PZDB is composed of zigzag chains with the Zn ion tetrahedrally coordinated by two diethylformamide (DEF) molecules and two carboxyl O-atoms from the bridging PZDB2− linker. The crystal structure of Co-PZDB represents a two-dimensional (2D) coordination grid. The Co2+ ion is octahedrally coordinated by two DEF molecules and four carboxyl oxygen atoms of the semi-deprotonated HPZDB− linker molecules. Yellow Zn-PZDB and red Co-PZDB turn green upon air exposure, which is due to linker oxidation, forming the (H)PZDB+ radical cation. UV/Vis/NIR spectroelectrochemistry reveals that Me2PZDB undergoes two reversible one-electron oxidations, producing characteristic absorption bands. Similar spectroscopic changes are observed upon oxidation of Zn-PZDB and Co-HPZDB. Chemical oxidation with SbCl5 yields the same color changes together with electron paramagnetic resonance signals typical of ligand-based radical cations. These findings indicate that the PZDB linker is the primary redox site. Ligand oxidation is followed by disintegration of the coordination polymers.




