polydentaatsetel
Polydentaatsetel is a term used in inorganic and organometallic chemistry to describe a class of chelating ligands that can coordinate to a central metal atom or ion through multiple donor atoms situated at different positions on the ligand framework. The word derives from the Latin roots polys (“many”) and dentatus (“toothed”), indicating that the ligand possesses several “tooth‑like” binding sites that allow it to wrap around the metal center. In a polydentaatsetel, the donor atoms may be of various types – nitrogen, oxygen, sulfur, or phosphorous – and can be arranged in either a rigid or flexible manner, thereby influencing the geometry and electronic properties of the resulting complex.
In practice, polydentaatsetel ligands form a wide range of coordination compounds, from simple octahedral chelates such
The field of polydentaatsetel research continues to expand as chemists design new ligands with tailored denticity