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Dive into the research topics where Suzanne M. Neville is active.

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Featured researches published by Suzanne M. Neville.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Guest Tunable Structure and Spin Crossover Properties in a Nanoporous Coordination Framework Material

Suzanne M. Neville; Gregory J. Halder; Karena W. Chapman; Martin B. Duriska; Boujemaa Moubaraki; Keith S. Murray; Cameron J. Kepert

The electronic switching properties of the nanoporous spin crossover framework [Fe(NCS)(2)(bpbd)(2)] x x(guest), SCOF-2, can be rationally manipulated via sorption of a range of molecular guests (acetone, ethanol, methanol, propanol, 1-acetonitrile) into the 1-D channels of this material. Pronounced changes to the spin crossover properties are related directly to the steric and electronic influence of the individual guests: the degree of lattice cooperativity, as reflected in the abruptness of the transition and presence of hysteresis, is strongly influenced by the presence of cooperative host-guest interactions, and the temperature of the transition varies with guest polarity through a proposed electrostatic interaction.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2009

Systematic study of spin crossover and structure in [Co(terpyRX)2](Y)2 systems (terpyRX = 4'-alkoxy-2,2':6',2''-terpyridine, X = 4, 8, 12, Y = BF4(-), ClO4(-), PF6(-), BPh4(-)).

Pia Kiil Nielsen; Hans Toftlund; Andrew D. Bond; John F. Boas; John R. Pilbrow; Graeme R. Hanson; Christopher J. Noble; Mark J. Riley; Suzanne M. Neville; Boujemaa Moubaraki; Keith S. Murray

A family of spin crossover cobalt(II) complexes of the type [Co(terpyRX)(2)](Y)(2) x nH(2)O (X = 4, 8, 12 and Y = BF(4)(-), ClO(4)(-), PF(6)(-), BPh(4)(-)) has been synthesized, whereby the alkyl chain length, RX, and counteranion, Y, have been systematically varied. The structural (single crystal X-ray diffraction) and electronic (magnetic susceptibility, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR)) properties have been investigated within this family of compounds. Single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis of [Co(terpyR8)(2)](ClO(4))(2), [Co(terpyR8)(2)](BF(4))(2) x H(2)O, and [Co(terpyR4)(2)](PF(6))(2) x 3 H(2)O, at 123 K, revealed compressed octahedral low spin Co(II) environments and showed varying extents of disorder in the alkyl tail portions of the terpyRX ligands. The magnetic and EPR studies were focused on the BF(4)(-) family and, for polycrystalline solid samples, revealed that the spin transition onset temperature (from low to high spin) decreased as the alkyl chain lengthened. EPR studies of polycrystalline powder samples confirmed these results, showing signals only due to the low spin state at the temperatures seen in magnetic measurements. Further to this, simultaneous simulation of the EPR spectra of frozen solutions of [Co(terpyR8)(2)](BF(4))(2) x H(2)O, recorded at S-, X-, and Q-band frequencies, allowed accurate determination of the g and A values of the low spin ground state. The temperature dependence of the polycrystalline powder EPR spectra of this and the R4 and R12 complexes is explained in terms of Jahn-Teller effects using the warped Mexican hat potential energy surface model perturbed by the low symmetry of the ligands. While well recognized in Cu(II) systems, this is one of the few times this approach has been used for Co(II).


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Perturbation of Spin Crossover Behavior by Covalent Post‐Synthetic Modification of a Porous Metal–Organic Framework

John E. Clements; Jason R. Price; Suzanne M. Neville; Cameron J. Kepert

Covalent post-synthetic modification is a versatile method for gaining high-level synthetic control over functionality within porous metal-organic frameworks and for generating new materials not accessible through one-step framework syntheses. Here we apply this topotactic synthetic approach to a porous spin crossover framework and show through detailed comparison of the structures and properties of the as-synthesised and covalently modified phases that the modification reaction proceeds quantitatively by a thermally activated single-crystal-to-single-crystal transformation to yield a material with lowered spin-switching temperature, decreased lattice cooperativity, and altered color. Structure-function relationships to emerge from this comparison show that the approach provides a new route for tuning spin crossover through control over both outer-sphere and steric interactions.


CrystEngComm | 2012

Supramolecular architecture of silver(I) coordination polymers containing polydentate N-donor ligands

Kittipong Chainok; Suzanne M. Neville; Craig M. Forsyth; William J. Gee; Keith S. Murray; Stuart R. Batten

The reaction of the polydentate N-donor ligands bmtz, H2bmtz, and bptz with various silver salts was investigated. New 1D coordination polymers [Ag2(bmtz) (ClO4)]ClO4 (1), [Ag(bmtz)]ClO4·MeCN (2), [{Ag(tcm)}2(H2bmtz)(MeCN)] (3) and [Ag(bptz)(NO3)] (5), and 2-D sheet structures, [{Ag(tcm)}2bmtz] (4), were synthesized. The structures are built up through the combination of coordination bonds, hydrogen bonding, Ag–π, π–π, and anion–π interactions to generate new supramolecular architectures. The supramolecular structure of the protonated amine salt [H2bptz](NO3)2 (6) is also described.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Hysteretic Four‐Step Spin Crossover within a Three‐Dimensional Porous Hofmann‐like Material

John E. Clements; Jason R. Price; Suzanne M. Neville; Cameron J. Kepert

Materials that display multiple stepped spin crossover (SCO) transitions with accompanying hysteresis present the opportunity for ternary, quaternary, and quinary electronic switching and data storage but are rare in existence. Herein, we present the first report of a four-step hysteretic SCO framework. Single-crystal structure analysis of a porous 3D Hofmann-like material showed long-range ordering of spin states: HS, HS0.67 LS0.33 , HS0.5 LS0.5 , HS0.33 LS0.67 , and LS. These detailed structural studies provide insight into how multistep SCO materials can be rationally designed through control of host-host and host-guest interactions.


Dalton Transactions | 2012

Cobalt complexes with tripodal ligands: implications for the design of drug chaperones

Paul D. Bonnitcha; Byung J. Kim; Rosalie K. Hocking; Jack K. Clegg; Peter Turner; Suzanne M. Neville; Trevor W. Hambley

Extensive research is currently being conducted into metal complexes that can selectively deliver cytotoxins to hypoxic regions in tumours. The development of pharmacologically suitable agents requires an understanding of appropriate ligand-metal systems for chaperoning cytotoxins. In this study, cobalt complexes with tripodal tren (tris-(2-aminoethyl)amine) and tpa (tris-(2-pyridylmethyl)amine) ligands were prepared with ancillary hydroxamic acid, β-diketone and catechol ligands and several parameters, including: pK(a), reduction potential and cytotoxicity were investigated. Fluorescence studies demonstrated that only tpa complexes with β-diketones showed any reduction by ascorbate in situ and similarly, cellular cytotoxicity results demonstrated that ligation to cobalt masked the cytotoxicity of the ancillary groups in all complexes except the tpa diketone derivative [Co(naac)tpa](ClO(4))(2) (naac = 1-methyl-3-(2-naphthyl)propane-1,3-dione). Additionally, it was shown that the hydroxamic acid complexes could be isolated in both the hydroxamate and hydroximate form and the pK(a) values (5.3-8.5) reveal that the reversible protonation/deprotonation of the complexes occurs at physiologically relevant pHs. These results have clear implications for the future design of prodrugs using cobalt moieties as chaperones, providing a basis for the design of cobalt complexes that are both more readily reduced and more readily taken up by cells in hypoxic and acidic environments.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Guest Programmable Multistep Spin Crossover in a Porous 2-D Hofmann-Type Material

Michael Murphy; Katrina A. Zenere; Florence Ragon; Peter D. Southon; Cameron J. Kepert; Suzanne M. Neville

The spin crossover (SCO) phenomenon defines an elegant class of switchable materials that can show cooperative transitions when long-range elastic interactions are present. Such materials can show multistepped transitions, targeted both fundamentally and for expanded data storage applications, when antagonistic interactions (i.e., competing ferro- and antiferro-elastic interactions) drive concerted lattice distortions. To this end, a new SCO framework scaffold, [FeII(bztrz)2(PdII(CN)4)]·n(guest) (bztrz = (E)-1-phenyl-N-(1,2,4-triazol-4-yl)methanimine, 1·n(guest)), has been prepared that supports a variety of antagonistic solid state interactions alongside a distinct dual guest pore system. In this 2-D Hofmann-type material we find that inbuilt competition between ferro- and antiferro-elastic interactions provides a SCO behavior that is intrinsically frustrated. This frustration is harnessed by guest exchange to yield a very broad array of spin transition characters in the one framework lattice (one- (1·(H2O,EtOH)), two- (1·3H2O) and three-stepped (1·∼2H2O) transitions and SCO-deactivation (1)). This variety of behaviors illustrates that the degree of elastic frustration can be manipulated by molecular guests, which suggests that the structural features that contribute to multistep switching may be more subtle than previously anticipated.


Chemical Communications | 2009

Variable length ligands: a new class of bridging ligands for supramolecular chemistry and crystal engineering

Martin B. Duriska; Suzanne M. Neville; Stuart R. Batten

A series of 1- and 2-D coordination polymers containing a functionalised diaza-18-crown-6 ligand show guest dependent variation of the ligand length.


CrystEngComm | 2005

A highly distorted (10,3)-a coordination framework constructed from alternating T-shaped and trigonal nodes

Gregory J. Halder; Suzanne M. Neville; Cameron J. Kepert

The isostructural 3-D coordination frameworks M2(tpt)2(NCS)4(BzOH)2·4(BzOH)·(H2O) (A: M = Fe(II), B: M = Co(II), tpt = 2,4,6-tris(4′-pyridyl)-1,3,5-triazine, BzOH = benzyl alcohol) consist of doubly interpenetrated (10,3)-a nets distorted by alternating T-shaped (M) and trigonal (tpt) three-connecting nodes.


Australian Journal of Chemistry | 2014

Thermal Spin Crossover Behaviour of Two-Dimensional Hofmann-Type Coordination Polymers Incorporating Photoactive Ligands

Florence Ragon; Korcan Yaksi; Natasha F. Sciortino; Guillaume Chastanet; Jean-François Létard; Deanna M. D'Alessandro; Cameron J. Kepert; Suzanne M. Neville

Two spin crossover (SCO)-active 2D Hofmann-type framework materials, [Fe(3-PAP)2Pd(CN)4] (A) and [Fe(4-PAP)2Pd(CN)4] (B) containing the photoactive azo-benzene-type ligands 3-phenylazo-pyridine (3-PAP) and 4-phenylazo-pyridine (4-PAP) were prepared. These materials form non-porous Hofmann-type structures whereby 2D [FeIIPd(CN)4] grids are separated by 3- or 4-PAP ligands. The iron(ii) sites of both materials (A and B) undergo abrupt and hysteretic spin transitions with characteristic transition temperatures T1/2↓,↑: 178, 190 K (ΔT: 12 K) and T1/2↓,↑: 233, 250 K (ΔT: 17 K), respectively. Photo-magnetic characterisations reveal light-induced excited spin state trapping (LIESST) activity in both A and B with characteristic T(LIESST) values of 45 and 40 K. Although both free ligands show trans- to-cis isomerisation in solution under UV-irradiation, as evidenced via absorption spectroscopy, such photo-activity was not observed in the ligands or complexes A and B in the solid state. Structural analysis of a further non-SCO active isomer to B, [Fe(4-PAP)2Pd(CN)4]·1/2(4-PAP) (B·(4-PAP)), which contains free ligand in the pore space is reported.

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Gregory J. Halder

Argonne National Laboratory

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Karena W. Chapman

Argonne National Laboratory

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