RESUMEN
The transplutonium elements (atomic numbers 95-103) are a group of metals that lie at the edge of the periodic table. As a result, the patterns and trends used to predict and control the physics and chemistry for transition metals, main-group elements and lanthanides are less applicable to transplutonium elements. Furthermore, understanding the properties of these heavy elements has been restricted by their scarcity and radioactivity. This is especially true for einsteinium (Es), the heaviest element on the periodic table that can currently be generated in quantities sufficient to enable classical macroscale studies1. Here we characterize a coordination complex of einsteinium, using less than 200 nanograms of 254Es (with half-life of 275.7(5) days), with an organic hydroxypyridinone-based chelating ligand. X-ray absorption spectroscopic and structural studies are used to determine the energy of the L3-edge and a bond distance of einsteinium. Photophysical measurements show antenna sensitization of EsIII luminescence; they also reveal a hypsochromic shift on metal complexation, which had not previously been observed in lower-atomic-number actinide elements. These findings are indicative of an intermediate spin-orbit coupling scheme in which j-j coupling (whereby single-electron orbital angular momentum and spin are first coupled to form a total angular momentum, j) prevails over Russell-Saunders coupling. Together with previous actinide complexation studies2, our results highlight the need to continue studying the unusual behaviour of the actinide elements, especially those that are scarce and short-lived.
RESUMEN
Three novel bismuth-organic compounds, with the general formula [Bi2(HPDC)2(PDC)2]·(arene)·2H2O (H2PDC = 2,6-pyridinedicarboxylic acid; arene = pyrene, naphthalene, and azulene), that consist of neutral dinuclear Bi-pyridinedicarboxylate complexes and outer coordination sphere arene molecules were synthesized and structurally characterized. The structures of all three phases exhibit strong π-π stacking interactions between the Bi-bound PDC/HPDC and outer sphere organic molecules; these interactions effectively sandwich the arene molecules between bismuth complexes and thereby prevent molecular vibrations. Upon UV irradiation, the compounds containing pyrene and naphthalene displayed red and green emission, respectively, with quantum yields of 1.3(2) and 30.8(4)%. The emission was found to originate from the T1 â S0 transition of the corresponding arene and result in phosphorescence characteristic of the arene employed. By comparison, the azulene-containing compound displayed very weak blue-purple phosphorescence of unknown origin and is a rare example of T2 â S0 emission from azulene. The pyrene- and naphthalene-containing compounds both display radioluminescence, with intensities of 11 and 38% relative to bismuth germanate, respectively. Collectively, these results provide further insights into the structure-property relationships that underpin luminescence from Bi-based materials and highlight the utility of Bi-organic molecules in the realization of organic emission.
RESUMEN
Modern molten salt reactor design and the techniques of electrorefining spent nuclear fuels require a better understanding of the chemical and physical behavior of lanthanide/actinide ions with different oxidation states dissolved in various solvent salts. The molecular structures and dynamics that are driven by the short-range interactions between solute cations and anions and long-range solute and solvent cations are still unclear. In order to study the structural change of solute cations caused by different solvent salts, we performed first-principles molecular dynamics simulations in molten salts and extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) measurements for the cooled molten salt samples to identify the local coordination environment of Eu2+ and Eu3+ ions in CaCl2, NaCl, and KCl. The simulations reveal that with the increasing polarizing the outer sphere cations from K+ to Na+ to Ca2+, the coordination number (CN) of Cl- in the first solvation shell increases from 5.6 (Eu2+) and 5.9 (Eu3+) in KCl to 6.9 (Eu2+) and 7.0 (Eu3+) in CaCl2. This coordination change is validated by the EXAFS measurements, in which the CN of Cl- around Eu increases from 5 in KCl to 7 in CaCl2. Our simulation shows that the fewer Cl- ions coordinated to Eu leads to a more rigid first coordination shell with longer lifetime. Furthermore, the diffusivities of Eu2+/Eu3+ are related to the rigidity of their first coordination shell of Cl-: the more rigid the first coordination shell is, the slower the solute cations diffuse.
RESUMEN
Cerium-oxo clusters have applications in fields ranging from catalysis to electronics and also hold the potential to inform on aspects of actinide chemistry. Toward this end, a cerium-acetylacetonate (acac1-) monomeric molecule, Ce(acac)4 (Ce-1), and two acac1--decorated cerium-oxo clusters, [Ce10O8(acac)14(CH3O)6(CH3OH)2]·10.5MeOH (Ce-10) and [Ce12O12(OH)4(acac)16(CH3COO)2]·6(CH3CN) (Ce-12), were prepared and structurally characterized. The Ce(acac)4 monomer contains CeIV. Crystallographic data and bond valence summation values for the Ce-10 and Ce-12 clusters are consistent with both clusters having a mixture of CeIII and CeIV cations. Ce L3-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy, performed on Ce-10, showed contributions from both CeIII and CeIV. The Ce-10 cluster is built from a hexameric cluster, with six CeIV sites, that is capped by two dimeric CeIII units. By comparison, Ce-12, which formed upon dissolution of Ce-10 in acetonitrile, consists of a central decamer built from edge sharing CeIV hexameric units, and two monomeric CeIII sites that are bound on the outer corners of the inner Ce10 core. Electrospray ionization mass spectrometry data for solutions prepared by dissolving Ce-10 in acetonitrile showed that the major ions could be attributed to Ce10 clusters that differed primarily in the number of acac1-, OH1-, MeO1-, and O2- ligands. Small angle X-ray scattering measurements for Ce-10 dissolved in acetonitrile showed structural units slightly larger than either Ce10 or Ce12 in solution, likely due to aggregation. Taken together, these results suggest that the acetylacetonate supported clusters can support diverse solution-phase speciation in organic solutions that could lead to stabilization of higher order cerium containing clusters, such as cluster sizes that are greater than the Ce10 and Ce12 reported herein.
RESUMEN
A cerium-oxo nanocluster capped by chloride ligands, [CeIV38-nCeIIInO56-(n+1)(OH)n+1Cl51(H2O)11]10- (n = 1-24), has been isolated from acidic chloride solutions by using potassium counterions. The crystal structure was elucidated using single crystal X-ray diffraction. At the center of the cluster is a {Ce14} core that exhibits the same fluorite-type structure as bulk CeO2, with eight-coordinate Ce sites bridged by tetrahedral oxo anions. The {Ce14} is further surrounded by a peripheral shell of six tetranuclear {Ce4} subunits that are located on each of the faces of the core to yield the {Ce38} cluster. The surface of the cluster is capped by 51 bridging/terminal chloride ligands and 11 water molecules; the anionic cluster is charge balanced by potassium counterions that exist in the outer coordination sphere. While assignment of the Ce oxidation state by bond valence summation was ambiguous, Ce L3-edge X-ray absorption, X-ray photoelectron, and UV-vis-NIR absorption results were consistent with a CeIII/CeIV cluster. Systematic changes in the XANES and UV-vis-NIR absorption spectra over time pointed to reactivity of the cluster upon exposure to air. These changes were examined using single crystal X-ray diffraction, and a clear single-crystal-to-single-crystal transformation was captured; an overall loss of surface-bound chlorides and water molecules as well as new µ2-OH sites was observed on the cluster surface. This work provides a rare snapshot of metal oxide cluster reactivity. The results may hold implications for understanding the physical and chemical properties of ceria nanoparticles and provide insight into the behavior of other metal-oxo clusters of significant technological and environmental interest.
RESUMEN
The luminescence properties of two divalent europium complexes of the type Eu[N(SPPh2)2]2(THF)2 (1) and Eu[N(SePPh2)2]2(THF)2 (2) were investigated. The first complex, Eu[N(SPPh2)2]2(THF)2 (1), was found to be isomorphous with the reported structure of complex 2 and exhibited room temperature luminescence with thermochromic emission upon cooling. We found the complex Eu[N(SePPh2)2]2(THF)2 (2) was also thermochromic but the emission intensity was sensitive to temperature. Both room temperature and low temperature (100 K) single crystal X-ray structural investigation of 1 and 2 indicate geometric distortions of the metal coordination, which may be important for understanding the thermochromic behavior of these complexes. The trivalent europium complex Eu[N(SPPh2)2]3 (3) with the same ligand as 1 was also structurally characterized as a function of temperature and exhibited temperature-dependent luminescence intensity, with no observable emission at room temperature but intense luminescence at 77 K. Variable temperature Raman spectroscopy was used to determine the onset temperature of luminescence of Eu[N(SPPh2)2]3 (3), where the 615 nm (5D0 â 7F2 transition) peak was quenched above 130 K. The UV-visible diffuse reflectance of 3 provides evidence of an LMCT band, supporting a mechanism of thermally activated LMCT quenching of Eu(III) emitting states. A series of ten isomorphous, trivalent lanthanide complexes of type Ln[N(SPPh2)2]3 (Ln = Eu (3) Pr (4), Nd (5), Sm (6), Gd (7), Tb (8)) and Ln[N(SePPh2)2]3 (Ln = Pr (9), Nd (10, structure was previously reported), Sm (11), and Gd (12) for Q = Se) were also synthesized and structurally characterized. These complexes for Ln = Pr, Nd, Sm, and Tb exhibited room temperature luminescence. This study provides examples of temperature-dependent luminescence of both Eu2+ and Eu3+, and the use of soft-atom donor ligands to sensitize lanthanide luminescence in a range of trivalent lanthanides, spanning near IR and visible emitters.
RESUMEN
Seven novel bismuth(III)-halide phases, Bi2Cl6(terpy)2·0.5(H2O) (1), Bi2Cl4(terpy)2(k2-TC)2(2) (TC = 2-thiophene monocarboxylate), BiCl(terpy)(k2-TC)2 (3A-Cl), BiBr(terpy)(k2-TC)2 (3A-Br), BiCl(terpy)(k2-TC)2 (3B-Cl), [BiCl(terpy)(k2-TC)2][Bi(terpy)(k2-TC)3]·0.55(TCA) (4), [BiBr3(terpy)(MeOH)] (5), and [BiBr2(terpy)(k2-TC)][BiBr1.16(terpy)(k2-TC)1.84] (6), were prepared under mild synthetic conditions from methanolic/aqueous solutions containing BiX3 (X = Cl, Br) and 2,2':6',2â³-terpyridine (terpy) and/or 2-thiophene monocarboxylic acid (TCA). A heterometallic series, 3A-Bi1-xEuxCl, with the general formula Bi1-xEuxCl(terpy)(k2-TC)2 (x = 0.001, 0.005, 0.01, 0.05) was also prepared through trace Eu doping of the 3A-Cl phase. The structures were determined through single-crystal X-ray diffraction and are built from a range of molecular units including monomeric and dimeric complexes. The solid-state photoluminescent properties of the compounds were examined through steady-state and time-resolved methods. While the homometallic phases exhibited broad green to yellow emission, the heterometallic phases displayed yellow, orange, and red emission that can be attributed to the simultaneous ligand/Bi-halide and Eu centered emissions. Photoluminescent color tuning was achieved by controlling the relative intensities of these concurrent emissions through compositional modifications including the Eu doping percentage. Notably, all emissive homo- and heterometallic phases exhibited rare visible excitation pathways that based on theoretical quantum mechanical calculations are attributed to halide-metal to ligand charge transfer (XMLCT). Through a combined experimental and computational approach, fundamental insight into the structure-property relationships within these Bi halide organic hybrid materials is provided.
RESUMEN
A new bismuth(III)-organic compound, Hphen[Bi2(HPDC)2(PDC)2(NO3)]·4H2O (Bi-1; PDC = 2,6-pyridinedicarboxylate and phen = 1,10-phenanthroline), was synthesized, and the structure was determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The compound was found to display bright-blue-green phosphorescence in the solid state under UV irradiation, with a luminescent lifetime of 1.776 ms at room temperature. The room temperature and low-temperature (77 K) emission spectra exhibited the vibronic structure characteristic of Hphen phosphorescence. Time-dependent density functional theory studies showed that the excitation pathway arises from an energy transfer from the dimeric structural unit to Hphen, with participation from a nine-coordinate Bi center. The triplet state of Hphen is believed to be stabilized via supramolecular interactions, which, when coupled with the heavy-atom effect induced by Bi, leads to the observed long-lived luminescence. The compound displayed a solid-state quantum yield of over 27%. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first such compound to exhibit phenanthrolinium phosphorescence with such long-lived, room temperature lifetimes in the solid state. To further elucidate the energy-transfer mechanism, Ln3+ (Ln = Eu, Tb, Sm) ions were successfully doped into the parent compound, and the resulting materials exhibited dual emission from Hphen and Ln, promoting tunability of the emission color.
RESUMEN
Five novel tetravalent thorium (Th) compounds that consist of Th(H2O)xCly structural units were isolated from acidic aqueous solutions using a series of nitrogen-containing heterocyclic hydrogen (H) bond donors. Taken together with three previously reported phases, the compounds provide a series of monomeric ThIV complexes wherein the effects of noncovalent interactions (and H-bond donor identity) on Th structural chemistry can be examined. Seven distinct structural units of the general formulas [Th(H2O)xCl8-x]x-4 (x = 2, 4) and [Th(H2O)xCl9-x]x-5 (x = 5-7) are described. The complexes range from chloride-deficient [Th(H2O)7Cl2]2+ to chloride-rich [Th(H2O)2Cl6]2- species, and theory was used to understand the relative energies that separate complexes within this series via the stepwise chloride addition to an aquated Th cation. Electronic structure theory predicted the reaction energies of chloride addition and release of water through a series of transformations, generally highlighting an energetic driving force for chloride complexation. To probe the role of the counterion in the stabilization of these complexes, electrostatic potential (ESP) surfaces were calculated. The ESP surfaces indicated a dependence of the chloride distribution about the Th metal center on the pKa of the countercation, highlighting the directing effects of noncovalent interactions (e.g., Hbonding) on Th speciation.
RESUMEN
Uranium(IV) complexation by 2-furoic acid (2-FA) was examined to better understand the effects of ligand identity and reaction conditions on species formation and stability. Five compounds were isolated: [UCl2 (2-FA)2 (H2 O)2 ]n (1), [U4 Cl10 O2 (THF)6 (2-FA)2 ]â 2 THF (2), [U6 O4 (OH)4 (H2 O)3 (2-FA)12 ]â 7 THFâ H2 O (3), [U6 O4 (OH)4 (H2 O)2 (2-FA)12 ]â 8.76 H2 O (4), and [U38 Cl42 O54 (OH)2 (H2 O)20 ]â m H2 Oâ n THF (5). The structures were determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction and further characterized by Raman, IR, and optical absorption spectroscopy. The thermal stability and magnetic behavior of the compounds were also examined. Variations in the synthetic conditions led to notable differences in the structural units observed in the solid state. At low H2 O/THF ratios, a tetranuclear oxo-bridged [U4 O2 ] core was isolated. Aging of this solution resulted in the formation a U38 oxo cluster capped by chloro and water ligands. However, at increasing water concentrations only hexanuclear units were observed. In all cases, at temperatures of 100-120 °C, UO2 nanoparticles formed.
RESUMEN
A series of lanthanide organic hybrid materials was synthesized via hydrothermal methods and structurally characterized using single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Four phases were obtained from reactions of La, Eu, and Tb ions with 1,10-phenanthroline (phen) and 2-thiophenecarboxylate (TC): [La2(phen)2(k1-TC)2(µ2-TC)2(η3-TC)2(H2O)2] (La-1/La-2), [Eu2(phen)2(k2-TC)2(µ2-TC)2(η3-TC)2]·2(H2O) (Eu-3), and [Tb2(phen)2(k2-TC)2(µ2-TC)4]·2(H2O) (Tb-4). Although each of the structures consists of homometallic ligand bridged dimers, the four distinct phases arise from subtle differences in ligand binding modes and supramolecular interactions. Ln doping was explored and resulted in analogous heterometallic systems, [Eu2-xLax(phen)2(k2-TC)2(µ2-TC)2(η3-TC)2]·2(H2O) (Eu2-xLax-3; x = 0.47-1.51) and [Tb2-yLay(phen)2(k2-TC)2(µ2-TC)4]·2(H2O) (Tb2-yLay-4; y = 0.42, 0.67). The photoluminescent properties of the solid-state materials were assessed using steady-state and time-dependent techniques to obtain excitation and emission profiles, transition energies, and lifetimes. The La phase exhibited ligand-based emission, whereas both Eu and Tb phases produced characteristic red and green metal-centered emission, respectively. By comparison, the heterometallic compounds exhibited both Ln- and ligand-based emission and photoluminescent color tuning of emission chromaticity. Further examination revealed that the color tuning was dependent on the relative La/Eu or La/Tb ratios as well as the excitation wavelength. These compounds are a rare example of single-phase Ln hybrid materials built from molecular units that exhibit excitation-dependent photoluminescent color tuning in the solid state.
RESUMEN
A series of eighteen tetravalent actinide (An = Th, U, Pu) compounds were synthesized from acidic aqueous solutions containing thorium, uranium, or plutonium and a series of protonated nitrogen heterocycles. The compounds were characterized using Raman, IR, and optical absorption spectroscopies. The structures were determined using single-crystal X-ray diffraction and found to consist of [An(H2O)xCly]4-y (x = 4-7 and y = 2-4) or AnCl62- molecular units. Breaks in the structural chemistry of the early actinides were observed, with Th adopting exclusively Th-aquo-chloro species and Pu forming only PuCl62-; U crystallized as both U-aquo-chloro and UCl62-. The relationship between the solid-state structural units and the solution species was interrogated using UV-vis-near-IR absorption spectroscopy. A comparison of the solution and solid-state spectra suggested that, although prevalent in the solid state, particularly for U and Pu, AnCl62- does not exist to an appreciable extent in the reaction solution. Despite the identification of U-aquo-chloro species in solution, there are limited reports of these complexes in the solid state. Isolation of these unique actinide(IV) chlorides as reported in this work may point to the importance of nonbonding interactions in the stabilization and precipitation of AnIV structural units.
RESUMEN
Two thorium(IV) compounds, [Th(H2O)4Cl4]·2(HPy·Cl) (1) and (HPy)3[Th3(H2O)2Cl10(OH)5]·4(HPy·Cl) (2) (HPy = pyridinium), were isolated from acidic aqueous solution. The compounds were synthesized at room temperature and subsequently characterized using single crystal X-ray diffraction along with Raman and IR spectroscopies. Whereas compound 1 is built from discrete mononuclear Th(H2O)4Cl4 units, compound 2 consists of a novel hydroxo-bridged trimeric [Th3(OH)5]7+ core. Such species are largely absent from discussions of Th solution and solid-state chemistry and their isolation may be attributed to outer coordination sphere interactions that help stabilize the structural units; extensive hydrogen bonding and π-π stacking interactions are present in 1 and 2. Density functional theory calculations were performed to predict the respective vibrational frequencies of the structural units, and their relative stability was predicted at the correlated molecular theory level. Small-angle X-ray scattering analysis of [Th3(OH)5]7+ in water indicates that the trimeric structural unit remains intact and that it is indeed an important species that necessitates consideration in geochemical models and for design of Th materials from water.
RESUMEN
A bismuth-organic compound containing 2,2':6'2"-terpyridine (terpy) and 2-thiophenecarboxylate (TC), of the general formula (terpy)Bi(κ2 -TC)3 â 0.47 H2 O (BiOM-1), has been synthesized under hydrothermal conditions. Addition of a lanthanide nitrate solution to the reaction mixture led to statistical replacement of the bismuth centers, and yielded isomorphous lanthanide containing compounds Bi1-x Lnx OM-1 (Ln=Nd, Sm, Eu, Tb, Dy, Er, and Yb) that showed bismuth and/or ligand sensitized lanthanide-centered emission, and the first example of NIR emission from a lanthanide doped BiOM. The structure was determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, and the level and uniformity of lanthanide ion incorporation into the bismuth host was determined by ICP-OES and electron microprobe analysis. For the visible emitters, lifetime data and quantum yields are presented. A high efficiency of sensitization was calculated for the europium analog (50.1 %), showing significant improvement over previously reported europium thiophenecarboxylates. These novel materials may provide strategies to address concerns over the long-term sustainability of the rare earth elements, especially relating to optical devices.
RESUMEN
Organic ligands with carboxylate functionalities have been shown to affect the solubility, speciation, and overall chemical behavior of tetravalent metal ions. While many reports have focused on actinide complexation by relatively simple monocarboxylates such as amino acids, in this work we examined Th(IV) and U(IV) complexation by 4-hydroxybenzoic acid in water with the aim of understanding the impact that the organic backbone has on the solution and solid state structural chemistry of thorium(IV) and uranium(IV) complexes. Two compounds of the general formula [An6O4(OH)4(H2O)6(4-HB)12]· nH2O [An = Th (Th-1) and U (U-1); 4-HB = 4-hydroxybenzoate] were synthesized via room-temperature reactions of AnCl4 and 4-hydroxybenzoic acid in water. Solid state structures were determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, and the compounds were further characterized by Raman, infrared, and optical spectroscopies and thermogravimetry. The magnetism of U-1 was also examined. The structures of the Th and U compounds are isomorphous and are built from ligand-decorated oxo/hydroxo-bridged hexanuclear units. The relationship between the building units observed in the solid state structure of U-1 and those that exist in solution prior to crystallization as well as upon dissolution of U-1 in nonaqueous solvents was investigated using small-angle X-ray scattering, ultraviolet-visible optical spectroscopy, and dynamic light scattering. The evolution of U solution speciation as a function of reaction time and temperature was examined. Such effects as well as the impact of the ligand on the formation and evolution of hexanuclear U(IV) clusters to UO2 nanoparticles compared to prior reported monocarboxylate ligand systems are discussed. Unlike prior reported syntheses of Th and U(IV) hexamers where the pH was adjusted to â¼2 and 3, respectively, to drive hydrolysis, hexamer formation with the HB ligand appears to be promoted only by the ligand.
RESUMEN
The room temperature synthesis and structural characterization of two U(IV) compounds isolated from acidic aqueous solution is reported. Evaporation of a U(IV)/HCl solution containing pyridinium (HPy) yielded (HPy)2UCl6 (1), yet in the presence of an organic carboxylate U(H2O)4Cl4·(HPy·Cl)2 (2) is obtained. The structures have been determined by single crystal X-ray diffraction and characterized by Raman, IR, and optical spectroscopies. The magnetism of both compounds was also investigated. The structure of 1 is built from UCl62- anionic units, pervasive in descriptions of the aqueous chemistry of tetravalent uranium, and is found to undergo a phase transition from C2/m to P1Ì upon cooling. By comparison, the structure of 2 contains a neutral U(IV)-aquo-chloro complex, U(H2O)4Cl4, for which there is no literature precedence. Density functional theory calculations were performed to predict the geometries, vibrational frequencies, and relative energetics of the UCl62- and U(H2O)4Cl4 units. The energetics of the reaction of U(H2O)4Cl4 to form the dianion are predicted to be exothermic in the gas phase and in aqueous solution. The predicted energetics coupled with no previous solid state reports of a U(IV)-aquo-chloro complex may point toward the importance of hydrogen bonding and other supramolecular interactions, prevalent in the structures of 1 and 2, on the stabilization and/or crystallization of the U(H2O)4Cl4 structural unit.
RESUMEN
X-ray scattering techniques [in situ resonant anomalous X-ray reflectivity (RAXR) and specular crystal truncation rods (CTR)] were used to compare muscovite (001) surfaces in contact with solutions containing either 0.1 mM plutonyl(VI) or 1 mM uranyl(VI) at pH = 3.2 ± 0.2, I(NaCl) = 0.1 M, as well as in situ grazing-incidence X-ray absorption near-edge structure (GI XANES) spectroscopy and ex situ alpha spectrometry. Details of the surface coverage are found to be very different. In the case of Pu, alpha spectrometry finds a surface coverage of 8.3 Pu/AUC (AUC = 46.72 Å2, the unit cell area), far in excess of the 0.5 Pu/AUC expected for ionic adsorption of PuO22+. GI XANES results show that Pu is predominantly tetravalent on the surface, and the CTR/RAXR results show that the adsorbed Pu is broadly distributed. Taken together with previous findings, the results are consistent with adsorption of Pu in the form of Pu(IV)-oxo-nanoparticles. In contrast, uranyl shows only negligible, if any, adsorption according to all methods applied. These results are discussed and compared within the context of known Pu and U redox chemistry.
RESUMEN
We report the room temperature synthesis and structural characterization of a µ2-hydroxo-bridged Pu(IV) dimer obtained from an acidic nitric acid solution. The discrete Pu2(OH)2(NO3)6(H2O)4 moiety crystallized with two distinct crystal structures, [Pu2(OH)2(NO3)6(H2O)4]2·11H2O (1) and Pu2(OH)2(NO3)6(H2O)4·2H2O (2), which differ primarily in the number of incorporated water molecules. High-energy X-ray scattering (HEXS) data obtained from the mother liquor showed evidence of a correlation at 3.7(1) Å but only after concentration of the stock solution. This distance is consistent with the dihydroxo-bridged distance of 3.799(1) Å seen in the solid-state structure as well as with the known Pu-Pu distance in PuO2. The structural characterization of a dihydroxo-bridged Pu moiety is discussed in terms of its relevance to the underlying mechanisms of tetravalent metal-ion condensation.
RESUMEN
Four cerium compounds - (HPy)2[CeCl6]·2(HPyCl) (Ce1-1), (HPy)2[CeCl6] (Ce1-2), (HPy)m[Ce38O56-x(OH)xCl50(H2O)12]·nH2O (Ce38), and (HPy)m[Ce52O80-x(OH)xCl59(H2O)17]·nH2O (Ce52) - were crystallized from acidic aqueous solutions using pyridinium (HPy) counterions. The latter consists of two unique cerium oxide nanoclusters that are built from 52 metal ions and represents the largest chloride capped {CeIII/IVO} and/or {MIVO} (M = Ce, Th, U, Np, Pu) nanocluster that adopts the fluorite-type structure of MO2 that has been reported.
RESUMEN
Recent advances enabled the discovery of heterometallic molecules for many metals: main group, d-block, lanthanides, and some actinides (U, Th). These complexes have at least two different metals joined by bridging ligands or by direct metal-metal bonding interactions. They are attractive because they can enable chemical cooperativity between metals from different parts of the periodic table. Some heterometallics provide access to unique reactivity and others exhibit physical properties that cannot be accessed by homometallic species. We envisioned that transuranic heterometallics might similarly enable new transuranic chemistry, though synthetic routes to such compounds have yet to be developed. Reported here is the first synthesis of a molecular transuranic complex that contains plutonium (Pu) and cobalt (Co). Our analyses of PuCl3{CoCp[OP(OEt)2]3} showed Pu(iv) and Co(iii) were present and suggested that the Pu(iv) oxidation state was stabilized by the electron donating phosphite ligands. This synthetic method - and the demonstration that Pu(iv) can be stabilized in a heterobimetallic molecular setting - provides a foundation for further exploration of transuranic multimetallic chemistry.