A Crystal of a Different Color

One chemical forms two colors of crystals, sheds insight on agostic bonds important in industrial catalysis.

Written byPacific Northwest National Laboratory
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One chemical forms two colors of crystals, sheds insight on agostic bonds important in industrial catalysis

RICHLAND, Wash. – Chemists have unexpectedly made two differently colored crystals - one orange, the other blue - from one chemical in the same flask while studying a special kind of molecular connection called an agostic bond. The discovery, reported in Angewandte Chemie International Edition on July 29, is providing new insights into important industrial chemical reactions such as those that occur while making plastics and fuels.

"We were studying agostic bonds in a project to make liquid fuels like methanol from carbon dioxide to replace fuels we get from oil," said chemist Morris Bullock at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. "We knew the molecule we were making would have an agostic bond, but we had no idea there'd be two flavors of these metal complexes."

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