Using the Singly Deprotonated Triethanolamine to Prepare Dinuclear Lanthanide(iii) Complexes: Synthesis, Structural Characterization and Magnetic Studies †

† This article is dedicated to Dante Gatteschi, a pioneer in the interdisciplinary field of Molecular Magnetism and a great mentor, on the occasion of his 70th birthday. Abstract: The 1:1 reactions between hydrated lanthanide(III) nitrates and triethanolamine (teaH 3) in MeOH, in the absence of external bases, have provided access to the dinuclear complexes containing the singly deprotonated form of the ligand. Use of excess of the ligand in the same solvent gives mononuclear complexes containing the neutral ligand and the representative compound [Pr(NO 3)(teaH 3) 2 ](NO 3) 2 (6) was characterized. The structures of the isomorphous complexes 1·2MeOH, 2·2MeOH and 4·2MeOH were solved by single-crystal X-ray crystallography; the other two dinuclear complexes are proposed to be isostructural with 1, 2 and 4 based on elemental analyses, IR spectra and powder XRD patterns. The IR spectra of 1–6 are discussed in terms of structural features of the complexes. The two Ln III atoms in centrosymmetric 1·2MeOH, 2·2MeOH and 4·2MeOH are doubly bridged by the deprotonated oxygen atoms of the two η 1 :η 1 :η 1 :η 2 :µ 2 teaH 2 − ligands. The teaH 2 − nitrogen atom and six terminal oxygen atoms (two from the neutral hydroxyl groups of teaH 2 − and four from two slightly anisobidentate chelating nitrato groups) complete 9-coordination at each 4f-metal center. The coordination geometries of the metal ions are spherical-relaxed capped cubic (1·2MeOH), Johnson tricapped trigonal prismatic (2·2MeOH) and spherical capped square antiprismatic (4·2MeOH). O–H···O H bonds create chains parallel to the a axis. The cation of 6 has crystallographic two fold symmetry and the rotation axis passes through the Pr III atom, the nitrogen atom of the coordinated nitrato group and the non-coordinated oxygen atom of the nitrato ligand. The metal ion is bound to the two η 1 :η 1 :η 1 :η 1 teaH 3 ligands and to one bidentate chelating nitrato group. The 10-coordinate Pr III atom has a sphenocoronal coordination geometry. Several H bonds are responsible for the formation of a 3D architecture in the crystal structure of 6. Complexes 1–6 are new members of a small family of homometallic Ln III complexes containing various forms of triethanolamine as ligands. Dc magnetic susceptibility studies in the 2–300 K range reveal the presence of a weak to moderate intramolecular antiferromagnetic exchange interaction (J = −0.30(2) cm −1 based on the spin HamiltonianˆH = −J(ˆ S …


Introduction
Electrons residing in 4f orbitals give trivalent lanthanides (Ln III ) interesting (and sometimes difficult to understand in detail) optical and magnetic properties that are currently exploited in modern technology.As far as magnetism is concerned, Ln III ions have been the key components of hard permanent magnets, such as the SmCo and FeNdB magnets, as well as the platform to investigate interesting physical phenomena, e.g., the spin-ice behavior in Dy 2 Ti 2 O 7 [1].Ln III complexes have also attracted intense interest since the first days of Molecular Magnetism, because of their high magnetic moments and large anisotropies [2].However, it was after the discovery that magnetic anisotropy could lead to magnetic hysteresis at the molecular level in a class of compounds known as Single-Molecule Magnets (SMMs) [3,4] that an explosion in their study has occurred.In 2003, Ishikawa's group reported SMM behavior in the double-decker phthalocyanine complexes (Bu n 4 N)[Ln(pc) 2 ] (Ln = Tb, Dy) [5], which gave birth of the Ln III SMM era [6,7].The magnetization dynamics of dinuclear and polynuclear Ln III SMMs mainly originate from single-ion behavior because it is difficult to create effective pathways for magnetic interactions between metal centers due to the nature of inner 4f electrons; in general, both the exchange and dipolar interactions between Ln III ions are weak [8].This situation is different from the magnetic relaxation of transition-metal-based SMMs, in which both the spin and exchange interactions contribute simultaneously to the magnetization dynamics [3].As an alternative candidate, Ln III centers that are usually weakly coupled in dinuclear and polynuclear complexes have shown advantages with respect to SMM studies because large magnetization reversal energy barriers can be achieved via single-ion anisotropy originating from strong spin-orbit coupling and crystal field effects [6,8,9].
Dinuclear complexes represent the simplest molecular entities which allow the study of magnetic interactions between Ln III spin carriers [10].By studying such systems, researchers could expect to understand the nature and strength of Ln III ••• Ln III exchange interactions, as well as possible alignment of spin vectors and anisotropy axes.These parameters can be affected by the molecular symmetry, the coordination geometry and/or the bridging ligands, which may act as superexchange pathways.More importantly, dinuclear Ln III SMMs are very important model systems to answer basic questions regarding single-ion relaxation vs. slow magnetic relaxation arising from the molecule as an entity.Thus, Ln III  2 complexes are highly desirable [10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20].Another interesting area to which dinuclear lanthanide(III) complexes (and also mononuclear ones) are relevant is quantum computation; Ln III ions are promising candidates for encoding quantum information [21,22].For the realization of a quantum gate, asymmetric dinuclear molecules composed of two weakly coupled Ln III qubits are promising [21].However, the synthesis of asymmetric molecular dimers is not straightforward, as nature tends to make them symmetric.From the synthetic inorganic chemistry viewpoint, the most logical simple route for the isolation of dinuclear 4f-metal ion complexes is the simultaneous employment of bidentate bridging anionic groups (e.g., η 1 :η 1 :µ 2 and/or η 1 :η 2 :µ 2 carboxylate groups) and chelating (most often bidentate or tridentate, e.g.bpy, phen, terpy, etc.) neutral capping organic ligands, which terminate oligomerization or polymerization by blocking two or three coordination sites per Ln III center [23].Another method is the simultaneous employment of capping bidentate nitrato groups (nitrato ligands have little tendency for bridging in Ln III chemistry) and neutral or anionic organic ligands that can, in principle, bridge only two metal centers; in addition to the bridging functionality, the ligands should preferably possess "chelating" parts to satisfy the demand for high coordination numbers at the Ln III centers [24][25][26].Thus, the choice of the primary organic ligands is crucial for the synthesis of Ln III  2 complexes.With all the above in mind and given the recently initiated interest of our groups in Ln III   2   complexes with interesting magnetic and/or luminescence properties [23,[25][26][27], we report here the synthesis, structures and magnetic properties of new such complexes bearing the monoanion of tris(2-hydroxyethyl)amine (the empirical name is triethanolamine, abbreviated hereafter as teaH 3 , Scheme 1).This ligand is very popular in 3d-and mixed 3d/4f-metal cluster chemistry (representative 3d/4f-metal compounds based on anionic forms of teaH 3 are described in refs [28][29][30][31]), but with limited used in homometallic Ln III and Ln II (Ln II = Eu II , Yb II ) chemistry.Ln III and Ln II complexes containing only the neutral ligand are always mononuclear [32][33][34][35][36], whereas the doubly deprotonated form (teaH − ) of the ligand, either alone or with the simultaneous presence of other bridging inorganic or organic ligands, have led to high nuclearity Ln III clusters [37][38][39].The singly deprotonated (teaH 2 − ) ligand has been employed only with combination with other bridging groups and such ligand "blends" give polynuclear Ln III complexes [38][39][40], although the teaH 2 − group usually (but not always) bridges two metal centers.
Magnetochemistry 2017, 3, 5 3 of 20 neutral capping organic ligands, which terminate oligomerization or polymerization by blocking two or three coordination sites per Ln III center [23].Another method is the simultaneous employment of capping bidentate nitrato groups (nitrato ligands have little tendency for bridging in Ln III chemistry) and neutral or anionic organic ligands that can, in principle, bridge only two metal centers; in addition to the bridging functionality, the ligands should preferably possess "chelating" parts to satisfy the demand for high coordination numbers at the Ln III centers [24][25][26].Thus, the choice of the primary organic ligands is crucial for the synthesis of Ln III 2 complexes.With all the above in mind and given the recently initiated interest of our groups in Ln III 2 complexes with interesting magnetic and/or luminescence properties [23,[25][26][27], we report here the synthesis, structures and magnetic properties of new such complexes bearing the monoanion of tris(2-hydroxyethyl)amine (the empirical name is triethanolamine, abbreviated hereafter as teaH3, Scheme 1).This ligand is very popular in 3d-and mixed 3d/4f-metal cluster chemistry (representative 3d/4f-metal compounds based on anionic forms of teaH3 are described in refs [28][29][30][31]), but with limited used in homometallic Ln III and Ln II (Ln II = Eu II , Yb II ) chemistry.Ln III and Ln II complexes containing only the neutral ligand are always mononuclear [32][33][34][35][36], whereas the doubly deprotonated form (teaH − ) of the ligand, either alone or with the simultaneous presence of other bridging inorganic or organic ligands, have led to high nuclearity Ln III clusters [37][38][39].The singly deprotonated (teaH2 − ) ligand has been employed only with combination with other bridging groups and such ligand "blends" give polynuclear Ln III complexes [38][39][40], although the teaH2 − group usually (but not always) bridges two metal centers.

Synthetic Comments and IR Discussion
Since we were interested in isolating dinuclear lanthanide(III) complexes with the singly deprotonated form of triethanolamine, i.e., teaH2 − , as ligand, we avoided the addition of external bases (Et3N, LiOH, Me4NOH, etc.) in the systems.Previous reports have shown that use of Et3N in the Ln III

Synthetic Comments and IR Discussion
Since we were interested in isolating dinuclear lanthanide(III) complexes with the singly deprotonated form of triethanolamine, i.e., teaH  [39], respectively, containing exclusively or partially the dianionic teaH 2− ligand.We hoped that the formation of Ln III -O(teaH 3 ) bonds in solution would lead to moderate polarization of the -CH 2 -CH 2 -O-H groups of teaH 3 and subsequent single deprotonation of the ligand; this has, indeed, turned out to be the case.Thus, the 1:1 Ln(NO 3 ) 3 •xH 2 O/teaH 3 reaction mixtures in MeOH gave solutions from which were subsequently isolated crystals of the dinuclear complexes [Ln 2 (NO 3 ) 4 (teaH 2 ) 2 ] (Ln = Pr, 1; Ln = Gd, 2; Ln = Tb, 3; Ln = Dy, 4; Ln = Ho, 5) in yields of ca.50%.The crystals of 1, 2 and 4 (in the form of their bis-methanol solvates) were of X-ray quality and their structures were solved by single crystal X-ray crystallography.Complexes 3 and 5 (isolated as polycrystalline powders) are proposed to be isostructural with 1, 2 and 4 based on elemental analyses and IR spectra (vide supra), as well as on powder XRD patterns (vide infra, Figure S1) for 2, 3 and 4. Assuming that the dinuclear complexes are the only products from the general Ln(NO 3 ) 3 •xH 2 O/teaH 3 (1:1) reaction system in MeOH, their formation can by summarized by Equation ( 1), where x is 6 or 5: Analogous reactions in MeCN gave amorphous powders which we could not characterize.In a next step, we examined the influence of the teaH 3 : Ln III reaction ratio on the product identity.Using an excess of the ligand, i.e., teaH 3 :Ln(NO 3 ) 3 •xH 2 O molar ratios of 2.5:1, we anticipated the formation of complexes of the general formula [Ln 2 (NO 3 ) 2 (teaH 2 ) 4 ].Somewhat to our disappointment, the products of such reactions in MeOH with the lighter lanthanides are the mononuclear complexes [Ln(NO 3 )(teaH 3 ) 2 ](NO 3 ) 2 , suggesting that the excess of teaH 3 does not favor the efficient polarization (due to coordination) of the -CH 2 -CH 2 -O-H groups of the ligand that would lead to its single deprotonation.To fully characterize the mononuclear complexes, we have crystallized the representative Pr III complex and solved its structure (vide infra); its formation is summarized by Equation (2): IR evidence shows that the mononuclear complexes with the heavier lanthanide(III) ions, e.g., Dy III , Ho III and Er III , are probably best formulated as eight-coordinate [Ln(teaH 3 ) 2 ](NO 3 ) 3 as a consequence of the lanthanide contraction.Since we were not particularly interested in mononuclear Ln III /teaH 3 complexes, we did not pursue this chemistry further.
In the IR spectra of well-dried samples of complexes 1-5, the strong intensity broad band at ~3350 cm −1 is assigned to the ν(OH) vibration of the coordinated -OH groups of teaH 2 − ; this mode in the spectrum of 6 appears as two bands at ~3400 and 3230 cm −1 [41].The broadness of the bands is indicative of the participation of the hydroxyl groups in H-bonding.The bands at ~1650 and 1473-1458 cm −1 are tentatively assigned to the δ(OH) and ν(C-C) modes, respectively.The KBr IR spectra of 1-5 exhibit a strong band at 1384 cm −1 , characteristic of the ν 3 (E ) [ν d (N-O)] mode of the planar D 3h ionic nitrate [42,43]; such a nitrate is absent in the complexes.The appearance of this band suggests that the nitrato ligands are replaced by bromides that are present in excess in the spectroscopic KBr matrix, thus producing ionic nitrates (KNO 3 ); this replacement is facilitated by the pressure used for the preparation of the pellet [42,43].In accordance with this conclusion, the band at 1384 cm −1 is absent from the mull spectra of these complexes.The mull IR bands at ~1480 and ~1290 cm −1 in 1-5 are assigned [25] to the ν 1 (A 1 )[ν(N=O)] and ν 5 (Btextsubscript2)[ν as (NO 2 )] vibrational modes, respectively, of the bidentate chelating (C 2v ) nitrato group.The separation of these two highest-wavenumber stretching bands (~190 cm −1 ) is large and typical of bidentate nitrates [25,42,43].The KBr IR spectrum of 6 (which contains both chelating and ionic nitrates) exhibits only the ionic nitrate (D 3h ) band at 1383 cm −1 due to the bidentate nitrato group → ionic nitrate transformation mentioned above; however, the mull spectra (nujol and hexachlorobutadiene) show the typical bands of both the bidentate nitrato group (at 1490 and 1285 cm −1 ) and ionic nitrate (1383 cm −1 ), as expected.The IR spectra (KBr) of the representative dinuclear complex 3 and the free teaH 3 ligand (liquid between CsI plates) are presented in Figures S2 and S3, respectively.

Description of Structures
The structures of 1•2MeOH, 2•2MeOH, 4•2MeOH and 6 have been solved by single-crystal X-ray crystallography (Table 1).Complexes 1•2MeOH, 2•2MeOH and 4•2MeOH are isomorphous and thus only the structure of 4•2MeOH will be described in detail.Complexes 3 and 5 are proposed to have similar structures with those of 1, 2 and 4 based on elemental analyses, IR spectra and powder X-ray patterns (Figure 1 and Figure S1).The measured pXRD patterns of 2, 3 and 4 are very similar indicating that the complexes are isostructural.The differences in intensity may be due to the preferred orientation of the crystalline powder samples [44,45].The experimental patterns agree satisfactorily with those calculated from the single-crystal X-ray diffraction data.However, they are not identical; a possible reason for this is the fact that the measured patterns correspond to unsolvated complexes, i.e., 2, 3 and 4 (this is also confirmed by elemental analyses), while the simulated ones refer to the bis(methanol) solvates.Structural plots of the compounds 4•2MeOH and 6, as well as supramolecular features of complex 4•2MeOH, are presented in Figures 2-4, while numerical data are listed in Tables 2 and 3 Complex 4•2MeOH crystallizes in the triclinic space group P1.Its structure consists of dinuclear [Dy 2 (NO 3 ) 4 (teaH 2 ) 2 ] and solvate MeOH molecules in an 1:2 ratio; the latter will not be further discussed.The asymmetric unit contains half of the dinuclear complex molecule and one MeOH lattice          To estimate the closer coordination polyhedron defined by the donor atoms around Dy1 (and its centrosymmetric equivalent), a comparison of the experimental structural data with the theoretical data for the most common polyhedral structures with nine vertices was performed by means of the program SHAPE [47].The so-called Continuous Shape Measures (CShM) approach essentially allows one to numerically evaluate by how much a particular structure deviates from an ideal shape.As there are no Platonic, Archimedean or Catalan polyhedra with nine vertices, and as no prisms or antiprisms can be constructed with an odd number of vertices, the main semiregular three-dimensional figures that may be considered are those listed (except, of course, the enneagon) in Table S1.The best fit (Table S1) was obtained for the spherical capped square antiprism (Figure S6), with the nitrato oxygen atom O4 being the capping atom.

Interatomic Distances (Å) a
The lattice structure of the complex is built through H bonds (Table S5) involving the MeOH oxygen atom (O1M) and the neutral hydroxyl oxygen atoms (O2, and O3) as donors, and the O1M, O3 and nitrato oxygen atoms O4 and O6 as acceptors; thus, O1M and O3 act as both donors and acceptors of H bonds.A weak, non-classical H bond is also formed with the teaH 2 − carbon atom C2 (this is the atom that is connected to N1) as donor and the nitrato oxygen atom O8 as acceptor.The O-H•••O H bonds create chains parallel to the a axis (Figure 3).S2 and S3, respectively).At first glance, the fact that the Ln III centers in the isomorphous complexes 1•2MeOH, 2•2MeOH and 4•2MeOH have different coordination geometries (and not consistent CShM values) seems strange.We attribute this to two factors: (i) For a given ligand set of nine donor atoms, the tricapped trigonal prism, capped square antiprism and capped cube polyhedra have comparable energies [48,49] and there exist minimal distortion interconversion paths between them; thus many structures are intermediate between two ideal shapes [48], and (ii) the Ln III -donor atom distances are slightly different due to lanthanide(III) contraction and this can affect the shape.For example, the CShM values of the Dy III center in 4•2MeOH for the spherical capped square antiprism (3.263), spherical-relaxed capped cube (4.016) and tricapped trigonal prism (4.165) are all low and similar (Table S1), and its polyhedron could be equally well described as spherical-relaxed capped cube (a polyhedron that gives the lowest CShM value for the Pr III center in 1•2MeOH, Table S3).
Of the accessible 10-coordinate polyhedra for metal ions, the sphenocorona (tetradecahedron) (Figure 4b) is the most appropriate for the description of the 10 donor atoms in 6 according to the program SHAPE [47] (Table S4).
Intercationic interactions through the C3-HB(3)•••O4 (and its symmetry equivalent) H bond result in the formation of chains parallel to the c axis (Figure 5a).Attached to these chains are lattice NO3 − ions through the O1-H(O1)•••O6 and O2-H(O2)•••O8 H bonds (Figure 5a).These lattice NO3 − ions interact further through the O3-H(O3)•••O8 and C6-HA(C6)•••O8-H bonds with neighboring chains forming a 3D architecture(Figure 5b).The dimensions of the H bonds are listed in Table S6.S2 and S3, respectively).At first glance, the fact that the Ln III centers in the isomorphous complexes 1•2MeOH, 2•2MeOH and 4•2MeOH have different coordination geometries (and not consistent CShM values) seems strange.We attribute this to two factors: (i) For a given ligand set of nine donor atoms, the tricapped trigonal prism, capped square antiprism and capped cube polyhedra have comparable energies [48,49] and there exist minimal distortion interconversion paths between them; thus many structures are intermediate between two ideal shapes [48], and (ii) the Ln III -donor atom distances are slightly different due to lanthanide(III) contraction and this can affect the shape.For example, the CShM values of the Dy III center in 4•2MeOH for the spherical capped square antiprism (3.263), spherical-relaxed capped cube (4.016) and tricapped trigonal prism (4.165) are all low and similar (Table S1), and its polyhedron could be equally well described as spherical-relaxed capped cube (a polyhedron that gives the lowest CShM value for the Pr III center in 1•2MeOH, Table S3).
Complex 6 crystallizes in the monoclinic space group C2/c.Its structure consists of mononuclear [Pr(NO 3 )(teaH 3 ) 2 ] 2+ cations and NO 3 − counterions in a 1:2 ratio; the latter will not be further discussed.
Of the accessible 10-coordinate polyhedra for metal ions, the sphenocorona (tetradecahedron) (Figure 4b) is the most appropriate for the description of the 10 donor atoms in 6 according to the program SHAPE [47] (Table S4).

Magnetic Susceptibility Studies
Direct current (dc) magnetic susceptibility data (χ M ) on dried polycrystalline, analytically pure samples of 2-5 were collected in the 2.0-300 K range.The data are plotted as χ M T vs. T products in Figure 6.The strength of the magnetic interactions between the two Ln III ions in the dinuclear complexes can be easily quantified with the gadolinium analog 2. Indeed, the Gd III ions present no spin-orbit coupling at the first order.Thus, the decrease or increase of the χ M T product when lowering the temperature for 2 reveals directly the presence of an antiferromagnetic or ferromagnetic, respectively, interaction between the Gd III centers.The room temperature χ M T value for 2 is 16.10 cm 3 •K•mol −1 , essentially equal to the spin-only value (15.75 cm 3 •K•mol −1 ) expected for two non-interacting Gd III ( 8 S 7/2 , S = 7/2, L = 0, g = 2) ions.The value of the χ M T product remains almost constant down to ~40 K and then decreases rapidly to 4.64 cm 3 •K•mol −1 at 2.0 K, suggesting an antiferromagnetic exchange interaction.Fit of the experimental data was performed by means of the conventional analytical expression derived from the isotropic spin Hamiltonian shown in Equation ( 3).
The room temperature χ M T values for 3 (23.04cm 3 •K•mol −1 ), 4 (28.07 cm 3 •K•mol −1 ) and 5 (29.32 cm 3 •K•mol −1 ) are in agreement with the expected theoretical values of 23.64, 28.34 and 28.14 cm 3 •K•mol −1 for two non-interacting Tb III ( 7 F 6 , S = 3, L = 3, g = 3/2), Dy III ( 6 H 15/2 , S = 5/2, L = 5, g j = 4/3) and Ho III ( 5 I 8 , S = 2, L = 6, g j = 5/4) centers respectively.In all the three cases, the χ M T product decreases slightly between 300 and ~50 K, before a more rapid decrease below ~30 K, to reach values of 4.24(3), 9.52(4) and 11.02(5) cm 3 •K•mol −1 at 2.0 K.For such Ln III ions with an unquenched orbital moment associated with a ligand field, the decrease of the χ M T product as the temperature is lowered can originate from the following possible contributions [50]: (a) the thermal depopulation of the Stark sublevels; (b) the presence of magnetic anisotropy; and (c) antiferromagnetic interactions between the Ln III centers.The relatively low χ M T values at 2.0 K may suggest the contribution of a weak to moderate Ln III •••Ln III interaction (Ln = Tb, Dy, Ho), as confirmed for the Gd III 2 complex 2. This assumption is further validated by the presence of a maximum in the χ M vs. T plot at 3.3 K for the Tb III 2 complex 3. Magnetization plots for 2-5 are shown in Figure 7.As a consequence of the antiferromagnetic interaction between the spin carriers, the shape of the plots is clearly sigmoid for 2 and 3, this effect being less pronounced for 4 and almost negligible for the Ho III analog 5.In order to investigate the presence of slow relaxation of the magnetization which might originate from an SMM behavior, alternating current (ac) magnetic susceptibility measurements were performed on powdered samples of 3-5 in the temperature range 2.0-12 K with zero dc field and a 4.0 G ac field oscillating in the 10-1500 Hz range.Unfortunately, no frequency dependent out-of-phase ( '' Μ χ ) signals were detected for the complexes.This was rather surprising for 4, because dysprosium(III) is a Kramers' ion (it has an odd number of 4f electrons), meaning that the ground state will always be bistable (one of the prerequisites for a molecule to be an SMM) irrespective of the ligand field symmetry.A review by Rinehart and Long five years ago [51] has provided a lucid account of how f-element electronic structure can, in principle, be manipulated to create new SMMS.The basic overall shape of free-ion electron density is oblate (i.e., it extends into the xy plane) for Tb III , Dy III and Ho III in their ground states.Therefore, to maximize the anisotropy of an oblate ion (and thus the chances to observe SMM properties), we should place it in a crystal field for which the ligand electron density is concentrated above and below the xy plane; this is clearly not the case here.Given that in the absence of high symmetry (as in 4), the ground state of Dy III is a doublet along the anisotropy axis with an angular momentum quantum number mj = ±15/2, we have determined the orientation of the ground state magnetic anisotropy axis for the Dy III center of 4 using a method reported in 2013 [52], based on an electrostatic model.This method does not demand the fitting of experimental data; it only requires the knowledge of the single-crystal X-ray structure of the complex.Following this method and the program MAGELLAN (a FORTRAN program), the ground state magnetic anisotropy axis for each Dy III ion (the two axis are co-parallel due to the existence of the crystallographically imposed inversion center in the molecule) is directed towards In order to investigate the presence of slow relaxation of the magnetization which might originate from an SMM behavior, alternating current (ac) magnetic susceptibility measurements were performed on powdered samples of 3-5 in the temperature range 2.0-12 K with zero dc field and a 4.0 G ac field oscillating in the 10-1500 Hz range.Unfortunately, no frequency dependent out-of-phase (χ M ) signals were detected for the complexes.This was rather surprising for 4, because dysprosium(III) is a Kramers' ion (it has an odd number of 4f electrons), meaning that the ground state will always be bistable (one of the prerequisites for a molecule to be an SMM) irrespective of the ligand field symmetry.A review by Rinehart and Long five years ago [51] has provided a lucid account of how f-element electronic structure can, in principle, be manipulated to create new SMMS.The basic overall shape of free-ion electron density is oblate (i.e., it extends into the xy plane) for Tb III , Dy III and Ho III in their ground states.Therefore, to maximize the anisotropy of an oblate ion (and thus the chances to observe SMM properties), we should place it in a crystal field for which the ligand electron density is concentrated above and below the xy plane; this is clearly not the case here.Given that in the absence of high symmetry (as in 4), the ground state of Dy III is a doublet along the anisotropy axis with an angular momentum quantum number m j = ±15/2, we have determined the orientation of the ground state magnetic anisotropy axis for the Dy III center of 4 using a method reported in 2013 [52], based on an electrostatic model.This method does not demand the fitting of experimental data; it only requires the knowledge of the single-crystal X-ray structure of the complex.Following this method and the program MAGELLAN (a FORTRAN program), the ground state magnetic anisotropy axis for each Dy III ion (the two axis are co-parallel due to the existence of the crystallographically imposed inversion center in the molecule) is directed towards the bridging oxygen atoms O1/O1 (Figure 8), which exhibit the shortest Dy-O bond distances (Table 2).This forces the oblate electron density of Dy III to be almost parallel to the easy axis, which is a non-favorable spatial conformation to achieve slow relaxation of the magnetization [52].No frequency dependent out-of-phase ac magnetic susceptibility signals were observed for 3-5 under external dc fields of 0.1 and 0.2 T, suggesting that the complexes are not field-induced SMMs.
Magnetochemistry 2017, 3, x FOR PEER REVIEW 20 of 20 the bridging oxygen atoms O1/O1΄ (Figure 8), which exhibit the shortest Dy-O bond distances (Table 2).This forces the oblate electron density of Dy III to be almost parallel to the easy axis, which is a non-favorable spatial conformation to achieve slow relaxation of the magnetization [52].No frequency dependent out-of-phase ac magnetic susceptibility signals were observed for 3-5 under external dc fields of 0.1 and 0.2 T, suggesting that the complexes are not field-induced SMMs.
Since the Ln III ions most often used in SMMs are Tb III , Dy III , Ho III and Er III (and rarely Yb III ) and since there are no reports of Pr III SMMs [6], we have not studied the magnetic properties of the Pr III complexes 1 and 6.

Materials and Physical Measurements
All manipulations were performed under aerobic conditions using reagents and solvents (Alfa Aesar, Aldrich; Karlsruhe, Germany and Tanfrichen, Germany, respectively) as received.Elemental analyses (C, H, N) were carried out by the University of Patras microanalytical service (Patras, Greece).FT-IR spectra (4000-400 cm −1 ) were recorded using a Perkin-Elmer (supplier, Watham, MA, USA) 16 PC FT-IR spectrometer with samples prepared as KBr pellets and as nujol or hexachlorobutadiene mulls between CsI disks.Solid state, variable-temperature direct-current (dc) magnetic susceptibility data were collected on powdered samples of representative complexes using a MPMS5 Quantum Design (supplier, San Diego, CA, USA) SQUID magnetometer, operating at dc fields of 0.3 T in the 300-30 K range and 0.03 T in the 30-2.0K range to avoid saturation effects at low temperatures.Diamagnetic corrections were applied to observed paramagnetic susceptibilities using Pascal's constants [53].The fit of the experimental data for the dinuclear Gd III complex was performed with the PHI program [54].The quality of the fits was parameterized using the factor R = {(χMT)exp − (χMT)calcd} 2 /{(χMT)exp} 2

Synthesis of [Pr2(NO3)4(teaH2)2]•2MeOH (1•2MeOH)
To a stirred colorless solution of teaH3 (66 μL, 0.50 mmol) in MeOH (20 mL) was added solid Pr(NO3)3•6H2O (0.218 g, 0.50 mmol).The solid soon dissolved and the resulting very pale green (almost colorless) solution was stirred for a further 10 min and left undisturbed in a closed flask at room temperature.X-ray quality, pale green crystals of the product were formed over a period of 4-5 days.The crystals were collected by filtration, washed with cold MeOH (1 mL) and Et2O (3 × 1 mL), and dried in air.Typical yields were in the range 40%-45% (based on the Pr III available).The complex was satisfactorily analyzed as lattice MeOH-free, i.e., as 1.Anal calc.for C12H28N6Pr2O18 (found values in parentheses): C 17.44 (17.63),H 3.42 (3.36), N 10.17 (9.87)%.IR bands (KBr cm −1 ): Since the Ln III ions most often used in SMMs are Tb III , Dy III , Ho III and Er III (and rarely Yb III ) and since there are no reports of Pr III SMMs [6], we have not studied the magnetic properties of the Pr III complexes 1 and 6.

Materials and Physical Measurements
All manipulations were performed under aerobic conditions using reagents and solvents (Alfa Aesar, Aldrich; Karlsruhe, Germany and Tanfrichen, Germany, respectively) as received.Elemental analyses (C, H, N) were carried out by the University of Patras microanalytical service (Patras, Greece).FT-IR spectra (4000-400 cm −1 ) were recorded using a Perkin-Elmer (supplier, Watham, MA, USA) 16 PC FT-IR spectrometer with samples prepared as KBr pellets and as nujol or hexachlorobutadiene mulls between CsI disks.Solid state, variable-temperature direct-current (dc) magnetic susceptibility data were collected on powdered samples of representative complexes using a MPMS5 Quantum Design (supplier, San Diego, CA, USA) SQUID magnetometer, operating at dc fields of 0.3 T in the 300-30 K range and 0.03 T in the 30-2.0K range to avoid saturation effects at low temperatures.Diamagnetic corrections were applied to observed paramagnetic susceptibilities using Pascal's constants [53].The fit of the experimental data for the dinuclear Gd III complex was performed with the PHI program [54].The quality of the fits was parameterized using the factor R = {(χ M T) exp − (χ M T) calcd } 2 /{(χ M T) exp } 2 .

Synthesis of [Pr 2 (NO 3 ) 4 (teaH 2 ) 2 ]•2MeOH (1•2MeOH)
To a stirred colorless solution of teaH 3 (66 µL, 0.50 mmol) in MeOH (20 mL) was added solid Pr(NO 3 ) 3 •6H 2 O (0.218 g, 0.50 mmol).The solid soon dissolved and the resulting very pale green (almost colorless) solution was stirred for a further 10 min and left undisturbed in a closed flask at room temperature.X-ray quality, pale green crystals of the product were formed over a period of 4-5 days.The crystals were collected by filtration, washed with cold MeOH (1 mL) and Et 2 O (3 × 1 mL), and dried in air.Typical yields were in the range 40%-45% (based on the Pr III available).The complex was satisfactorily analyzed as lattice MeOH-free, i.e., as  To a stirred colorless solution of teaH 3 (330 µL, 2.50 mmol) in MeOH (12 mL) was added dropwise a solution of Pr(NO 3 ) 3 •6H 2 O (0.435 g, 1.00 mmol) in the same solvent (5 mL).The resulting very pale green (almost colorless) solution was stirred for a further 15 min.The undisturbed solution was allowed to slowly evaporate in an open flask at room temperature.X-ray quality, pale green crystals of the product were grown over a period of 2-3 d.When precipitation was judged to be complete, the crystals were collected by filtration, washed with cold MeOH (0.

Figure 4 .Figure 5 .
Figure 4. (a) Labeled plot of the cation [Pr(NO3)(teaH3)2] 2+ that is present in the structure of 6.Since the methylene groups of teaH3 defined by the C1 and C2 atoms present disorder at two sites, only the carbon atoms of the sites with the 0.8 occupancy have been drawn.Symmetry operation used to generate equivalent atoms: (') -x + 1, y, −z + 1/2.Only the H atoms of the hydroxyl groups are shown.(b) The sphenocoronal coordination geometry of Pr1 in the structure of 6.The plotted polyhedron is the ideal, best-fit polyhedron using the program SHAPE [47].Primed and unprimed donor atoms are related by the symmetry operation -x + 1, y, −z + 1/2.

Figure 4 .Figure 4 .Figure 5 .
Figure 4. (a) Labeled plot of the cation [Pr(NO 3 )(teaH 3 ) 2 ] 2+ that is present in the structure of 6.Since the methylene groups of teaH 3 defined by the C1 and C2 atoms present disorder at two sites, only the carbon atoms of the sites with the 0.8 occupancy have been drawn.Symmetry operation used to generate equivalent atoms: ( ) -x + 1, y, −z + 1/2.Only the H atoms of the hydroxyl groups are shown.(b) The sphenocoronal coordination geometry of Pr1 in the structure of 6.The plotted polyhedron is the ideal, best-fit polyhedron using the program SHAPE [47].Primed and unprimed donor atoms are related by the symmetry operation -x + 1, y, −z + 1/2.

Figure 6 .
Figure 6.χΜT vs. T plots for compounds 2 (open circles), 3 (solid squares), 4 (solid circles) and 5(open diamonds).The solid line is the fit of the data to the theoretical model for the Gd III 2 complex 2; see the text for the fit parameters.

Figure 6 .
Figure 6.χ M T T plots for compounds 2 (open circles), 3 (solid squares), 4 (solid circles) and 5 (open diamonds).The solid line is the fit of the data to the theoretical model for the Gd III 2 complex 2; see the text for the fit parameters.

Magnetochemistry 2017, 3 ,Figure 7 .
Figure 7. (a) Magnetization plots at 2.0 K for compounds 2 (open circles), 3 (solid squares), 4 (solid circles) and 5 (open diamonds).The solid line is the fit of the data to the theoretical model for the Gd III 2 complex 2. (b) First derivative of the magnetization plots evidencing their sigmoid shape.

Figure 7 .
Figure 7. (a) Magnetization plots at 2.0 K for compounds 2 (open circles), 3 (solid squares), 4 (solid circles) and 5 (open diamonds).The solid line is the fit of the data to the theoretical model for the Gd III2

Figure 8 .
Figure 8. Ground state magnetic anisotropy axis (green bars) for the two symmetry-related Dy III ions that are present in the molecule of 4.

Figure 8 .
Figure 8. Ground state magnetic anisotropy axis (green bars) for the two symmetry-related Dy III ions that are present in the molecule of 4.