A conjugated polyrotaxane poly[Cu(1.2)(+)] has been synthesized via copper(
I)-templated strategy and electropolymerization. The polymer backbone conta
ins alternating quaterthiophene moieties and 1,10-phenanthroline complexes.
It is threaded by coordinating cyclic units. Copper(I) binding was reversi
ble only if lithium cation was present during copper removal, as a labile s
caffolding, maintaining the topography of the free coordinating sites and o
f the organic matrix, as demonstrated by H-1 NMR studies on monomer precurs
ors. Electrochemistry has been coupled with X-ray absorption spectroscopy a
t the Cu K edge to study the interactions between the complexed copper cent
ers and the conjugated backbone. The spectra of poly[Cu(1.2)(n+)] in variou
s oxidation states have been analyzed and compared with those of monomeric
model compounds. For all of the samples four nitrogen atoms are the closest
neighbors. No dramatic geometric and electronic differences exist between
monomeric and polyrotaxane Cu(I) binding sites. However, for the copper(I)
rotaxane the closest neighbors were unambiguously split into two subshells
of two nitrogen atoms, reflecting higher steric constraints around the copp
er center in the polymetallorotaxane. For the divalent complexed copper-rot
axane, these steric constraints partially prevent the flattening of the coo
rdination tetrahedron expected when passing from Cu(I) to Cu(II) and the Cu
(II)-N distances are significantly longer in the polymer (2.04 Angstrom) th
an in the model compound (2.00 Angstrom).