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. 1964 Sep 18;145(3638):1305-7.
doi: 10.1126/science.145.3638.1305.

Mononuclear and Polynuclear Chemistry of Rhenium (III): Its Pronounced Homophilicity

Mononuclear and Polynuclear Chemistry of Rhenium (III): Its Pronounced Homophilicity

F A Cotton et al. Science. .

Abstract

Extensive chemical, spectrophotometric, and x-ray structural studies have shown that trivalent rhenium is strongly homophilic-that is, it tends to form bonds to other Re(111) atoms-and it forms at least three different series of [ReX(4)](n)(n-) complexes. The mononuclear, square complex, [ReBr(4)](-), adds two water molecules to give trans-[ReBr(4)(H(2)O)(2)](-). The binuclear complexes [Re(2)Cl(8)](2-) and [Re(2)Br(8)](2-) have strong Re-Re bonds, unsupported by halide bridges. The trinuclear species, [Re(3)X(12)](3-) or Re(3)X(9)L(3), contain the triangular Re(3)X(9) clusters. Use of ReCI(3) appears always to lead directly to products containing Re(3)Cl(9); this unit exists in ReCl(3) itself and does not appear to be kinetically labile. The [Re(2)X(8)](2-) ions are obtained by reduction of ReO(4)(-) in aqueous HCl or HBr. Salts of [ReBr(4)(H(2)O)(2)](-) can be obtained directly from solutions of ReBr(3) in HBr along with numerous other compounds, some containing trinuclear clusters.

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