Lithium dimethylcuprate exists as a
dimer in
diethyl ether forming an 8-membered ring. Similarly, lithium diphenylcuprate crystallizes as a dimeric etherate, {{chem2|[{Li(OEt2)}(CuPh2)]2}}. If the Li+ ions are
complexed with the
crown ether 12-crown-4, the resulting diorganylcuprate anions adopt a linear
coordination geometry at copper. For the 'higher order cyanocuprate' Li2CuCN(CH3)2,
Lipshutz and coworkers have claimed that the
cyanide ligand is coordinated to Li and
π-bound to Cu. However, the existence of 'mixed higher order organocuprates' has been disputed by Bertz and coworkers, who rejoined that the cyano ligand is actually bound solely to the lithium atom, and that such a structure could still explain the enhanced reactivity of cuprate prepared from CuCN. To date, no crystallographic evidence for the existence of 'mixed higher order cuprates' ([R2CuX]2–, X ≠ R) has been obtained. On the other hand, a homoleptic higher order cuprate in the form of a [Ph3Cu]2– moiety has been observed in Li3Cu2Ph5(SMe2)4, prepared by Olmstead and Power. ==Mixed cuprates==