Transition metal perchlorate complexes are coordination complexes with one or more perchlorateligands. Perchlorate can bind to metals through one, two, three, or all four oxygen atoms. Usually however, perchlorate is a counterion, not a ligand.
Homoleptic complexes
Homoleptic complexes, i.e. complexes where all the ligands are the same (in this case perchlorate), are of fundamental interest because of their simple stoichiometries.
Several anhydrous metal diperchlorate complexes are known but most are not molecular (and hence, not complexes). For example, many compounds with the formula M(ClO4)2 are coordination polymers (M = Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu). An exception to this pattern is palladium(II) perchloratePd(ClO4)2, which is a square planar complex consisting of a pair of bidentate perchlorate ligands. Furthermore, anhydrous Cu(ClO4)2 is sublimable, which implies the existence of molecular Cu(ClO4)2.[1]
More common than homoleptic complexes are those with two or more types of ligands. A classic case is the dicationic complex pentamminecobalt(III) perchlorate, which had resisted formation by conventional substitution reactions.[2] It was prepared by oxidation of the azide complex:[3]
The preparation of perchlorate complexes can be challenging because perchlorate is a weakly coordinating anion.
Chlorine trioxide is an important precursor to anhydrous perchlorate complexes. It serves as a source of ClO+2 and ClO−4. It reacts with vanadium pentoxide (V2O5) to give VO2(ClO4) and VO(ClO4)3. Hydrated mercury and cadmium perchlorates can be dehydrated with Cl2O6, affording anhydrous compounds.[6]
MCl2 + 2Cl2O6 → ClO2M(ClO4)3 + 2 ClO2 + Cl2
ClO2M(ClO4)3 → M(ClO4)2 + ClO2
In some cases, chlorine trioxide serves both as an oxidant and a dehydrating agent:
Silver perchlorate, which has some solubility in noncoordinating solvents, reacts with some metal chlorides to give the corresponding perchlorate complex.[4]
Reactions
Anhydrous perchlorate complexes are susceptible to hydrolysis:
Cu(ClO4)2 + 6 H2O → [Cu(H2O)6](ClO4)2
Upon heating, perchlorate complexes yield oxides, evolving chlorine oxides in the process. For example, thermolysis of titanium perchlorate gives TiO2, ClO2, and O2 The titanyl species TiO(ClO4)2 is an intermediate in this decomposition.[7]
Perchlorate complexes and the reagents used to prepare them are often dangerously explosive intrinsically and especially in contact with organic compounds.[6]
References
^Favier, Frederic; Barguès, Stephane; Pascal, Jean Louis; Belin, Claude; Tillard-Charbonnel, Monique (1994). "Crystal and molecular structure of anhydrous copper(II) perchlorate". J. Chem. Soc., Dalton Trans. (21): 3119–3121. doi:10.1039/DT9940003119.
^Jones, W. E.; Swaddle, T. W. (1967). "Concerning the existence of perchloratopentamminecobalt(III) perchlorate". Canadian Journal of Chemistry. 45 (22): 2647–2650. doi:10.1139/v67-433.
^Harrowfield, J. Macb.; Sargeson, A. M.; Singh, B.; Sullivan, J. C. (1975). "Trapping of Labile Cobalt(III) Complexes. Characterization of the Perchloratopentaamminecobalt(III) Ion". Inorganic Chemistry. 14 (11): 2864–2865. doi:10.1021/ic50153a059.
^ abMasuda, Hideki; Taga, Tooru; Osaki, Kenji; Sugimoto, Hiroshi; Yoshida, Zenichi; Ogoshi, Hisanobu (1980). "Crystal and molecular structure of (Octaethylporphinato)iron(III) perchlorate. Anomalous magnetic properties and structural aspects". Inorganic Chemistry. 19 (4): 950–955. doi:10.1021/ic50206a031.
^Babaeva, V. P.; Rosolovskii, V. (1974). "Volatile titanium perchlorate". Bulletin of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR Division of Chemical Science. 23 (11): 2330–2334. doi:10.1007/BF00922105. ISSN0568-5230.