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1.
Inorg Chem ; 53(24): 12939-46, 2014 Dec 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25415432

RESUMEN

We demonstrate the manipulation of the Lewis acid strength to selectively fractionate different types of Gd3N metallofullerenes that are present in complex mixtures. Carbon disulfide is used for all Lewis acid studies. CaCl2 exhibits the lowest reactivity but the highest selectivity by precipitating only those gadolinium metallofullerenes with the lowest first oxidation potentials. ZnCl2 selectively complexes Gd3N@C88 during the first 4 h of reaction. Reaction with ZnCl2 for an additional 7 days permits a selective precipitation of Gd3N@C84 as the dominant endohedral isolated. A third fraction is the filtrate, which possesses Gd3N@C86 and Gd3N@C80 as the two dominant metallofullerenes. The order of increasing reactivity and decreasing selectivity (left to right) is as follows: CaCl2 < ZnCl2 < NiCl2 < MgCl2 < MnCl2 < CuCl2 < WCl4 ≪ WCl6 < ZrCl4 < AlCl3 < FeCl3. As a group, CaCl2, ZnCl2, and NiCl2 are the weakest Lewis acids and have the highest selectivity because of their very low precipitation onsets, which are below +0.19 V (i.e., endohedrals with first oxidation potentials below +0.19 V are precipitated). For CaCl2, the precipitation threshold is estimated at a remarkably low value of +0.06 V. Because most endohedrals possess first oxidation potentials significantly higher than +0.06 V, CaCl2 is especially useful in its ability to precipitate only a select group of gadolinium metallofullerenes. The Lewis acids of intermediate reactivity (i.e., precipitation onsets estimated between +0.19 and +0.4 V) are MgCl2, MnCl2, CuCl2, and WCl4. The strongest Lewis acids (WCl6, ZrCl4, AlCl3, and FeCl3) are the least selective and tend to precipitate the entire family of gadolinium metallofullerenes. Tuning the Lewis acid for a specific type of endohedral should be useful in a nonchromatographic purification method. The ability to control which metallofullerenes are permitted to precipitate and which endohedrals would remain in solution is a key outcome of this work.


Asunto(s)
Fulerenos/química , Gadolinio/química , Ácidos de Lewis/química , Aminación , Precipitación Química , Dióxido de Silicio/química
2.
Inorg Chem ; 52(16): 9606-12, 2013 Aug 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23952569

RESUMEN

A typical arc-synthesis generates many types of fullerenes and endohedrals. Resulting soot extracts contain a complex mixture of >50 types of fullerenes, metallofullerenes, and their structural isomers. Prior to application development, novel separation methods are required to fractionate this rich array of metallic, metallic carbide, metallic nitride, and metallic oxide endohedrals, all of which can be present in a single, soot extract. Herein, we report the discovery of CuCl2 as a Lewis acid that will selectively precipitate only the more reactive members of each of these endohedral families. The more reactive Sc4O2@Ih-C80, Sc3C2@Ih-C80, and Sc3N@D3h-C78 endohedrals are quickly removed from extracts to greatly decrease the number of endohedrals present in a sample. Experiments indicate that enrichment factors of several orders of magnitude can be achieved within minutes of reaction time. CuCl2 also has sufficient selectivity to resolve and separate structural isomers, as demonstrated with Er2@C82 (isomer I, Cs(6)-C82 versus isomer III). The selective complexation of CuCl2 with fullerenes can be correlated to their first oxidation potential. We estimate a significantly lower threshold of precipitation for CuCl2 (<0.19 V) compared to stronger Lewis acids. Fullerenes and metallofullerenes having first oxidation potentials above 0.19 V tend to remain unreacted in solution. In contrast, species with first oxidation potentials below 0.19 V (vs Fc/Fc(+)) precipitate via complexation, and are easily decomplexed. CuCl2 is compared to Lewis acids having higher precipitation thresholds (e.g., FeCl3) in our goal to predict a priori which endohedrals would remain in solution versus which endohedral species would complex and precipitate. The ability to predict endohedral precipitation a priori is beneficial to the design of purification strategies for metallofullerenes.


Asunto(s)
Compuestos Inorgánicos de Carbono/química , Cobre/química , Fulerenos/química , Compuestos de Nitrógeno/química , Óxidos/química , Estructura Molecular , Estereoisomerismo
3.
Dalton Trans ; 43(20): 7435-41, 2014 May 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24522624

RESUMEN

Minimal research exists for non-chromatographic separations of rare-earth metallofullerenes containing di-metallic (M2), di-metallic carbide (M2C2), and tri-metallic nitride (M3N) clusters trapped inside fullerene cages. Herein, we demonstrate a non-HPLC method (i.e., SAFA, Stir and Filter Approach) for purifying Er3N@Ih-C80, a rare-earth, metallic nitride clusterfullerene. We describe a strategic method that chemically releases rare-earth metallofullerenes (e.g., M2@C2n, M3N@C2n) trapped by aminosilica during SAFA. Recovery of metallofullerenes from spent silica represents a "green approach" because the spent silica and its useful, immobilized rare-earth metallofullerenes would have been discarded as waste material. We observe selectivity during metallofullerene uptake to aminosilica and also during its release from spent silica via addition of CS2. We describe a procedure to obtain samples enriched in M2 and M3N endohedrals. M2C2n fractions from our SAFA release process contain a wide range of higher metallofullerenes (e.g., Gd2C90-Gd2C140 or Er2C76-Er2C122). It is facile to obtain samples enriched in M3N@C82-M3N@C92. Note that unreacted M3N@C80 remains in the filtrate. The strategy for handling rare-earth metallofullerenes with different degrees of reactivity toward aminosilica is also discussed.

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