Tailoring the molecular components of hybrid organic-inorganic materials enables precise control over their electronic properties. Designing electrically conductive coordination materials, metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), has relied on single-metal nodes because the metal-oxo clusters present in the vast majority of MOFs are not suitable for electrical conduction due to their localized electron orbitals. Therefore, the development of metal-cluster nodes with delocalized bonding would greatly expand the structural and electrochemical tunability of conductive materials. Whereas the cuboidal [FeS] cluster is a ubiquitous cofactor for electron transport in biological systems, few electrically conductive artificial materials employ the [FeS] cluster as a building unit due to the lack of suitable bridging linkers. In this work, we bridge the [FeS] clusters with ditopic N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) linkers through charge-delocalized Fe-C bonds that enhance electronic communication between the clusters. [FeSCl(ditopic NHC)] exhibits a high electrical conductivity of 1 mS cm at 25 °C, surpassing the conductivity of related but less covalent materials. These results highlight that synthetic control over individual bonds is critical to the design of long-range behavior in semiconductors.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10599474 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3sc02195e | DOI Listing |
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