The majority of elements on the periodic table are metals and their chemistry, especially their formation and dissolution, belong to the oldest technical chemical processes. Thereby, the synthesis of metals plays a central role in the evolution of mankind and thus complete periods are named according to the metals used there for the first time (Copper Age: 4300 – 2200 B.C.; Bronze Age: 2200 – 1000 B.C.; Iron Age: 1000 – 40 B.C.). However, to date awareness of metals beyond bulk metals and their stable compounds (e.g. salts, oxides, sulphides, in solution or in bulk) is limited. Basic knowledge of the intermediates in the formation and breaking of metal-metal bonds are mostly unknown even though this process plays a vital role in the evolution of mankind.
Ideal model compounds to shed light on the borderland between molecules and the solid state of metals at a molecular level are metalloid clusters of the general formula MnRm (n > m; M = metal like Al, Au, Sn etc.; R = ligand like S-C6H4-COOH, N(SiMe3)2 etc.). As the size of such metalloid cluster compounds is within the nanometer range, research in this field gains a technological aspect in the field of nanotechnology where metal nanoparticles move more and more into the focus of actual research. Such metal nanoparticles normally exhibit a certain size distribution and are thus a mixture of metalloid clusters of different size. Consequently, metalloid clusters are also ideal model compound to establish structure property relations for metal nanoparticles. However, the synthesis of metalloid clusters is quite complex as they are metastable intermediates on the way to the bulk phase as outlined in scheme 1.
Consequently, the dearth of understanding the intermediate states of metals can be attributed to the lack of useful starting materials and accessible synthetic routes to synthesize metalloid cluster compounds localized in this intermediate range. Additionally, when such compounds are identified the high reactivity and their metastable character partly hinder isolation for further investigations.