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Spin-state transition is a vital factor that dominates catalytic processes, but unveiling its mechanism still faces the great challenge of the lack of catalyst model systems. Herein, we propose that the {Fe-Pt} Hofmann clathrates, whose dynamic spin-state transition of metal centers can be chemically manipulated through iodine treatment, can serve as model systems in the spin-related structural-catalytic relationship study. Taking the photocatalytic synthesis of H2O2 as the basic catalytic reaction, when the spin state of Fe(II) in the clathrate is high spin (HS), sacrificial agents are indispensable to the photosynthesis of H2O2 because only the photocatalytic oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) occurs; when it is low spin (LS), both the ORR and water oxidation reaction (WOR) can take place, enabling a high H2O2 photosynthesis rate of 66â¯000 µM g-1 h-1 under visible-light irradiation. In situ characterizations combined with density functional theory calculations confirmed that, compared with the HS-state counterpart, the LS state can induce strong charge transfer between the LS Fe(II) and the iodide-coordinating Pt(IV) in the polymer and reduce the energy barriers for both the ORR and WOR processes, dominating the on-off switching upon the photosynthesis of H2O2 in O2-saturated water. What's more, the one-pot tandem reactions were conducted to utilize the synthesized H2O2 for transforming the low-value-added sodium alkenesulfonates into value-added bromohydrin products with decent conversion rates. This work provides a pioneering investigation into on-off switching the photocatalytic overall reaction through manipulating the metallic spin-state transition in spin-crossover systems.
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The present work is part of our ongoing quest for developing functional inorganic complexes using unorthodox pyridyl-pyrazolyl-based ligands. Accordingly, we report herein the synthesis, characterization, and luminescence and magnetic properties of four 3d-4f mixed-metal complexes with a general core of Ln2Zn6 (Ln = Dy, Gd, Tb, and Eu). In stark contrast to the popular wisdom of using a compartmental ligand with separate islands of hard and soft coordinating sites for selective coordination, we have vindicated our approach of using a ligand with overcrowded N-coordinating sites that show equal efficiency with both 4f and 3d metals toward multinuclear cage-cluster formation. The encouraging red and green photolumiscent features of noncytotoxic Eu2Zn6 and Tb2Zn6 complexes along with their existence in nanoscale dimension have been exploited with live-cell confocal microscopy imaging of human breast adenocarcinoma (MCF7) cells. The magnetic features of the Dy2Zn6 complex confirm the single-molecule-magnet behavior with befitting frequency- and temperature-dependent out-of-phase signals along with an Ueff value of â¼5 K and a relaxation time of 8.52 × 10-6 s. The Gd2Zn6 complex, on the other hand, shows cryogenic magnetic refrigeration with an entropy change of 11.25 J kg-1 K-1 at a magnetic field of 7 T and at 2 K. Another important aspect of this work reflects the excellent agreement between the experimental results and theoretical calculations. The theoretical studies carried out using the broken-symmetry density functional theory, ORCA suite of programs, and MOLCAS calculations using the complete-active-space self-consistent-field method show an excellent synergism with the experimentally measured magnetic and spectroscopic data.
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Linkage isomers involving changes in the bonding mode of ambidentate ligands have potential applications in data storage, molecular machines, and motors. However, the observation of the cyanide-linkage-isomerism-induced spin change (CLIISC) effect characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction remains a considerable challenge. Meanwhile, the high-spin and low-spin states can be reversibly switched in spin-crossover (SCO) compounds, which provide the potential for applications to data storage, switches, and sensors. Here, a new perovskite-type SCO framework (PPN)[Fe{Ag(CN)2}3] (PPN+ = bis(trisphenylphosphine)iminium cation) is synthesized, which displays the unprecedented aging and temperature dependences of hysteretic multistep SCO behaviors near room temperature. Moreover, the thermal-induced cyanide linkage isomerization from FeII-N≡C-AgI to FeII-C≡N-AgI is revealed by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, Raman, and Mössbauer spectra, which is associated with a transition from the mixed spin state to the low-spin state and a dramatic volume shrinkage. Considering the wide use of cyanogen in magnetic systems, the association of CLIISC and SCO opens a new dimension to modulate the spin state and realize a colossal negative thermal expansion.
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Magnetic bistability in single-molecule magnets (SMMs) is a potential basis for new types of nanoscale information storage material. The standard model for thermally activated relaxation of the magnetization in SMMs is based on the occurrence of a single Orbach process. Here, we show that incorporating a phosphorus atom into the framework of the dysprosium metallocene [(CpiPr5)Dy(CpPEt4)]+[B(C6F5)4]- (CpiPr5 is penta-isopropylcyclopentadienyl, CpPEt4 is tetraethylphospholyl) leads to the occurrence of two distinct high-temperature Orbach processes, with energy barriers of 1410(10) and 747(7) cm-1, respectively. These barriers provide experimental evidence for two different spin-phonon coupling regimes, which we explain with the aid of ab initio calculations. The strong and highly axial crystal field in this SMM also allows magnetic hysteresis to be observed up to 70 K, using a scan rate of 25 Oe s-1. In characterizing this SMM, we show that a conventional Debye model and consideration of rotational contributions to the spin-phonon interaction are insufficient to explain the observed phenomena.
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The escalating contamination by per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) has become an urgent issue in recent years, and the structural diversity of PFAS is the major challenge for effective pollution control. Herein, we take the intrinsic advantages of squaramide and prepare a new two-dimensional covalent organic framework (FSQ-1) that exhibits broad-spectrum PFAS affinity. The tailor-made linker forges hydrogen-bond donors, hydrogen-bond acceptors, and fluorophilic segments into one framework. The obtained material exhibits multipoint and multitype affinity to PFAS with different structures, by which high-efficient and broad-spectrum removal of various PFAS can be simultaneously achieved. Notably, the thermodynamic profiles provided by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) experiments further illustrate the underlying mechanism of the broad-spectrum affinity. FSQ-1 can also be applied for efficient PFAS extraction in trace-level PFAS analysis.
Assuntos
Poluentes Ambientais , Fluorocarbonos , Estruturas Metalorgânicas , Poluentes Químicos da Água , Poluentes Ambientais/análise , Fluorocarbonos/química , Hidrogênio , Quinina/análogos & derivados , Poluentes Químicos da Água/análiseRESUMO
Here we reported the deuteration of the metal-binding equatorial water molecules in a reported HoIII single-molecule magnet (SMM) with pentagonal-bipyramidal geometry, from [Ho(CyPh2 PO)2 (H2 O)5 ]3+ to [Ho(CyPh2 PO)2 (D2 O)5 ]3+ . The hyperfine structures originating from the nuclear spin of 165 HoIII can be clearly observed. Moreover, the resulting magnetization dynamics revealed the switch of the relative relaxation rates for the two isotope-isomorphic complexes-respectively faster/slower at low/high temperature. The noticeable isotope effect arises from not only the paramagnetic metal center but also the diamagnetic ligands, which can be explained by the ab initio calculated tunnel splitting and the involvement of the super-hyperfine interaction related to the difference in the nuclear spin number of protium (1 H, I=1 /2 ) and deuterium (2 H, I=1).
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Stimuli-responsive materials that can be reversibly switched by light are of immense interest. Among them, photo-responsive spin crossover (SCO) complexes have great promises to combine the photoactive inputs with multifaceted outputs into switchable materials and devices. However, the reversible control the spin-state change by photochromic guests is still challenging. Herein, we report an unprecedented guest-driven light-induced spin change (GD-LISC) in a Hofmann-type metal-organic framework (MOF), [Fe(bpn){Ag(CN)2 }2 ]â azobenzene. (1, bpn=1,4-bis(4-pyridyl)naphthalene). The reversible trans-cis photoisomerization of azobenzene guest upon UV/Vis irradiation in the solid-state results in the remarkable magnetic changes in a wide temperature range of 10-180â K. This finding not only establishes a new switching mechanism for SCO complexes, but also paves the way toward the development of new generation of photo-responsive magnetic materials.
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Combining Ising-type magnetic anisotropy with collinear magnetic interactions in single-molecule magnets (SMMs) is a significant synthetic challenge. Herein we report a Dy[15-MCCu -5] (1-Dy) SMM, where a DyIII ion is held in a central pseudo-D5h pocket of a rigid and planar Cu5 metallacrown (MC). Linking two Dy[15-MCCu -5] units with a single hydroxide bridge yields the double-decker {Dy[15-MCCu -5]}2 (2-Dy) SMM where the anisotropy axes of the two DyIII ions are nearly collinear, resulting in magnetic relaxation times for 2-Dy that are approximately 200 000 times slower at 2â K than for 1-Dy in zero external field. Whereas 1-Dy and the YIII -diluted Dy@2-Y analogue do not show remanence in magnetic hysteresis experiments, the hysteresis data for 2-Dy remain open up to 6â K without a sudden drop at zero field. In conjunction with theoretical calculations, these results demonstrate that the axial ferromagnetic Dy-Dy coupling suppresses fast quantum tunneling of magnetization (QTM). The relaxation profiles of both complexes curiously exhibit three distinct exponential regimes, and hold the largest effective energy barriers for any reported d-f SMMs up to 625â cm-1 .
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The combination of magnetic interaction with high magnetic anisotropy provides a promising way for modulating/fine-tuning molecular magnetic behaviors. Here, we show the building block approach for the synthesis of a family of dilanthanide single-molecule magnets (SMMs) bridged with a cyanometallate starting from a monolanthanide SMM. Contingent on the central para-/diamagnetic [M(CN)6]3- (M = Fe, Co) integrated between two highly anisotropic pentagonal-bipyramid Dy(III) subunits, the remanence of magnetization is OFF/ON below 15 K and they respectively display a record reversal barrier of 659 K among d-f SMMs and 975 K among cyano-bridged SMMs.
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Reduction of the uranium(III) metallocene [(η5 -C5 i Pr5 )2 UI] (1) with potassium graphite produces the "second-generation" uranocene [(η5 -C5 i Pr5 )2 U] (2), which contains uranium in the formal divalent oxidation state. The geometry of 2 is that of a perfectly linear bis(cyclopentadienyl) sandwich complex, with the ground-state valence electron configuration of uranium(II) revealed by electronic spectroscopy and density functional theory to be 5f3 6d1 . Appreciable covalent contributions to the metal-ligand bonds were determined from a computational study of 2, including participation from the uranium 5f and 6d orbitals. Whereas three unpaired electrons in 2 occupy orbitals with essentially pure 5f character, the fourth electron resides in an orbital defined by strong 7s-6d z 2 mixing.
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The reactions of chiral ligand (R)/(S)-1,1'-binaphthyl-2,2'-diyl phosphate (R-HL/S-HL) and ErCl3·6H2O afford two pairs of di- and tetranuclear enantiomers [Er2(R/S-L)4(EtOH)6]Cl2·6.5EtOH (R-1, S-1) and [Er4(PO4)(R/S-L)8(EtOH)3(H2O)]2Cl(OH)·15EtOH·11H2O (R-2, S-2). The nuclearity of these complexes is controllable and depends on the reaction temperature with a template effect. Their chirality was evidenced by circular dichroism (CD) spectra. R-1 exhibits two magnetic relaxation pathways under a zero field, with an apparent barrier of 40 K. Ab initio calculations revealed a ferromagnetic dipolar interaction between these two Er(III) ions, the equatorial nature of the ligand field, and the probable origin of the two relaxations.
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A stable Dy(III)-dispersed compound with single-molecule magnet behavior, Dy(0.06)Y(0.94)(OH)CO3, was isolated by a general strategy targeted at the doping of paramagnetic Dy(3+) into a diamagnetic 3D inorganic network of Y(OH)CO3. The single-ion origin of slow magnetic relaxation was gradually released as variations of the dysprosium/yttrium ratio and finally gave a relatively large spin-reversal barrier around 200 K and high hysteresis temperature of 8 K. This study opens up new opportunities to investigate the slow magnetic relaxation and magnetostructural correlation by choosing a suitable inorganic architecture with strong axial anisotropy.
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Covalent-organic frameworks (COFs) with photoinduced donor-acceptor (D-A) radical pairs show enhanced photocatalytic activity in principle. However, achieving long-lived charge separation in COFs proves challenging due to the rapid charge recombination. Here, we develop a novel strategy by combining [6 + 4] nodes to construct zyg-type 3D COFs, first reported in COF chemistry. This structure type exhibits a fused Olympic-rings-like shape, which provides a platform for stabilizing the photoinduced D-A radical pairs. The zyg-type COFs containing catalytically active moieties such as triphenylamine and phenothiazine (PTZ) show superior photocatalytic production rates of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). Significantly, the photochromic radical states of these COFs show up to 400% enhancement in photocatalytic activity compared to the parent states, achieving a remarkable H2O2 synthesis rate of 3324 µmol g-1 h-1, which makes the PTZ-COF one of the best crystalline porous photocatalysts in H2O2 production. This work will shed light on the synthesis of efficient 3D COF photocatalysts built on topologies that can facilitate photogenerating D-A radical pairs for enhanced photocatalysis.
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Through a mixed-ligand strategy, the structural change from a discrete dinuclear DyIII cluster to a one-dimensional polymeric chain was achieved, maintaining the two magnetic entities with the same {Dy(dppbO2)2(H2O)5} (dppbO2 = 1,4-butylenebis(diphenylphosphine oxide)) core structure. Since the hydrogen bonding between the equatorial coordinated water molecules and the guests/solvents/anions is distinct, the local geometry and the equatorial planarity of the first coordination sphere of the central DyIII ion become slightly different caused by the second coordination sphere. As a result, the dinuclear compound shows typical butterfly-shaped hysteresis loops, while it significantly opens at zero magnetic field up to 11 K for the 1D polymer, which is unprecedented in coordination polymers. Our experimental observations and theoretical analysis indicate that the hydrogen bonding leads to the fine-tuning of certain bond lengths and angles of the coordination environment, as well as the crystal field to a certain extent, revealing that the second coordination sphere affects the first coordination sphere by hydrogen bonding.
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Two new two-dimensional (2D) coordination polymers, [FeII(L)2{PdII(SCN)4}] (L1 = 3-(9-anthracenyl)-pyridine (1) and L2 = 4-(9-anthracenyl)-pyridine (2)), were constructed by employing square-planar [Pd(SCN)4]2- building blocks. Compound 1 exhibits a complete spin-crossover (SCO) behaviour under normal atmospheric pressure, and represents the first SCO example in a 2D system containing [Pd(SCN)4]2- units. In contrast, compound 2 only shows paramagnetic behaviour at measured temperatures. It is clear that the fine-tuning of the monodentate ligand can modulate the ligand field and packing fashions, which sheds light on developing new SCO materials.
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Herein, we reported two didysprosium single-molecule magnets constructed with {Dy(bbpen)(MeOH)} subunits and a π-conjugated tpb or non-conjugated tpcb bridging ligand. The former exhibits extremely weak luminescence that makes it difficult to simulate its emission spectra. However, the later shows obviously enhanced and well-resolved luminescence, which helps us to gain knowledge about the magneto-optical correlation and the relevant magnetic energy levels.
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We report herein three air, thermal and solvent stable interlocked triacontanuclear giant nanocages, generated using a node and spacer concept. Interestingly, the crystal structures of the cages are not only nano-dimensional but also exist in the nano-dimension range, which was corroborated with microscopic images. The combination of microscopic and crystallographic data, in effect, led us to a unique advantageous situation of generating nanomaterials with hard-to-come-by structural information at the molecular level.
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In this contribution, we report the synthesis, characterization and luminescence-magnetic properties of Ln-clusters (Ln = Gd3+, Eu3+ and Tb3+) using a new pyridine-pyrazole functionalized ligand fitted with a chromophoric phenanthroline backbone. The unorthodox N-rich ligand forms isostructural trinuclear lanthanide complexes with a topology that closely resembles two interdigitating hairpins. The clusters crystallize in chiral space groups and also exhibit chirality for bulk samples, which were further confirmed using solid state CD spectra. Magnetic studies on the complexes reveal their interesting features while the Gd cluster shows a significant cryogenic magnetic cooling behaviour with a moderately high magnetic entropy change of -23.42 J kg-1 K-1 at 7 T and 2 K. On the other hand, Eu and Tb complexes exhibit interesting fluorescence properties. The compounds were subsequently used as fluorescent probes for the imaging of human breast adenocarcinoma (MCF7) cells. Live cell confocal microscopy images show that the complexes penetrate beyond the usual cytoplasm region and can be useful in imaging the nucleus region of MCF7 cells.
Assuntos
Complexos de Coordenação/química , Elementos da Série dos Lantanídeos/química , Imagem Óptica , Fenantrolinas/química , Complexos de Coordenação/síntese química , Humanos , Ligantes , Células MCF-7 , Fenômenos Magnéticos , Estrutura Molecular , Pirazóis , PiridinasRESUMO
Single-molecule magnets (SMMs) with higher nuclearity provide opportunity for understanding the inherent nature of magnetic dynamics that are not limited to mononuclear SMMs. Herein, centrosymmetric [Dy2(L)2(9-AC)4(MeOH)2]·2CH2Cl2·2H2O (1, where 9-AC = anthracene-9-carboxylate) and equilateral triangular [Dy3(OH)(OMe)(L)3(dbm)3](OH)·3CH2Cl2·7H2O (2, where dbm = dibenzoylmethane anion) were isolated using the Schiff-base ligand 4-(anthracen-9-yl)-2-((quinolin-8-ylimino)methyl)phenol (HL). Static and dynamic magnetic measurements reveal that 1 and 2 display slow magnetic relaxation under zero and applied dc field, respectively. The magnetization relaxation for 1 is dominated by a Raman process due to its non-negligible transverse anisotropy. Complex 2 exhibits field-induced SMM behavior with a reversal barrier of 56 cm-1. By means of ab initio calculations and magnetic measurements, the multiple relaxation regime in 2 was investigated. We suggest that Orbach and Raman mechanisms dominate in the high/low temperature domains, respectively.