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1.
Nature ; 629(8013): 819-823, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38778232

ABSTRACT

Lanthanide rare-earth metals are ubiquitous in modern technologies1-5, but we know little about chemistry of the 61st element, promethium (Pm)6, a lanthanide that is highly radioactive and inaccessible. Despite its importance7,8, Pm has been conspicuously absent from the experimental studies of lanthanides, impeding our full comprehension of the so-called lanthanide contraction phenomenon: a fundamental aspect of the periodic table that is quoted in general chemistry textbooks. Here we demonstrate a stable chelation of the 147Pm radionuclide (half-life of 2.62 years) in aqueous solution by the newly synthesized organic diglycolamide ligand. The resulting homoleptic PmIII complex is studied using synchrotron X-ray absorption spectroscopy and quantum chemical calculations to establish the coordination structure and a bond distance of promethium. These fundamental insights allow a complete structural investigation of a full set of isostructural lanthanide complexes, ultimately capturing the lanthanide contraction in solution solely on the basis of experimental observations. Our results show accelerated shortening of bonds at the beginning of the lanthanide series, which can be correlated to the separation trends shown by diglycolamides9-11. The characterization of the radioactive PmIII complex in an aqueous environment deepens our understanding of intra-lanthanide behaviour12-15 and the chemistry and separation of the f-block elements16.

2.
Sci Adv ; 10(1): eadj8765, 2024 Jan 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38181087

ABSTRACT

Numerous technologies-with catalytic, therapeutic, and diagnostic applications-would benefit from improved chelation strategies for heavy alkaline earth elements: Ra2+, Ba2+, and Sr2+. Unfortunately, chelating these metals is challenging because of their large size and weak polarizing power. We found 18-crown-6-tetracarboxylic acid (H4COCO) bound Ra2+, Ba2+, and Sr2+ to form M(HxCOCO)x-2. Upon isolating radioactive 223Ra from its parent radionuclides (227Ac and 227Th), 223Ra2+ reacted with the fully deprotonated COCO4- chelator to generate Ra(COCO)2-(aq) (log KRa(COCO)2- = 5.97 ± 0.01), a rare example of a molecular radium complex. Comparative analyses with Sr2+ and Ba2+ congeners informed on what attributes engendered success in heavy alkaline earth complexation. Chelators with high negative charge [-4 for Ra(COCO)2-(aq)] and many donor atoms [≥11 in Ra(COCO)2-(aq)] provided a framework for stable complex formation. These conditions achieved steric saturation and overcame the weak polarization powers associated with these large dicationic metals.

3.
Nat Chem ; 16(2): 168-172, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37945833

ABSTRACT

The structure and bonding of radium (Ra) is poorly understood because of challenges arising from its scarcity and radioactivity. Here we report the synthesis of a molecular Ra2+ complex using 226Ra and the organic ligand dibenzo-30-crown-10, and its characterization in the solid state by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The crystal structure of the Ra2+ complex shows an 11-coordinate arrangement comprising the 10 donor O atoms of dibenzo-30-crown-10 and that of a bound water molecule. Under identical crystallization conditions, barium (Ba2+) yielded a 10-coordinate 'Pac-Man'-shaped structure lacking water. Furthermore, the bond distance between the Ra centre and the O atom of the coordinated water is substantially longer than would be predicted from the ionic radius of Ra2+ and by analogy with Ba2+, supporting greater water lability in Ra2+ complexes than in their Ba2+ counterparts. Barium often serves as a non-radioactive surrogate for radium, but our findings show that Ra2+ chemistry cannot always be predicted using Ba2+.

4.
Inorg Chem ; 62(50): 20834-20843, 2023 Dec 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37811965

ABSTRACT

Targeted α therapy (TAT) of soft-tissue cancers using the α particle-emitting radionuclide 223Ra holds great potential because of its favorable nuclear properties, adequate availability, and established clinical use for treating metastatic prostate cancer of the bone. Despite these advantages, the use of 223Ra has been largely overshadowed by other α emitters due to its challenging chelation chemistry. A key criterion that needs to be met for a radionuclide to be used in TAT is its stable attachment to a targeting vector via a bifunctional chelator. The low charge density of Ra2+ arising from its large ionic radius weakens its electrostatic binding interactions with chelators, leading to insufficient complex stability in vivo. In this study, we synthesized and evaluated macropa-XL as a novel chelator for 223Ra. It bears a large 21-crown-7 macrocyclic core and two picolinate pendent groups, which we hypothesized would effectively saturate the large coordination sphere of the Ra2+ ion. The structural chemistry of macropa-XL was first established with the nonradioactive Ba2+ ion using X-ray diffraction and X-ray absorption spectroscopy, which revealed the formation of an 11-coordinate complex in a rare anti pendent-arm configuration. Subsequently, the stability constant of the [Ra(macropa-XL)] complex was determined via competitive cation exchange with 223Ra and 224Ra radiotracers and compared with that of macropa, the current state-of-the-art chelator for Ra2+. A moderate log KML value of 8.12 was measured for [Ra(macropa-XL)], which is approximately 1.5 log K units lower than the stability constant of [Ra(macropa)]. This relative decrease in Ra2+ complex stability for macropa-XL versus macropa was further probed using density functional theory calculations. Additionally, macropa-XL was radiolabeled with 223Ra, and the kinetic stability of the resulting complex was evaluated in human serum. Although macropa-XL could effectively bind 223Ra under mild conditions, the complex appeared to be unstable to transchelation. Collectively, this study sheds additional light on the chelation chemistry of the exotic Ra2+ ion and contributes to the small, but growing, number of chelator development efforts for 223Ra-based TAT.


Subject(s)
Nuclear Medicine , Radium , Humans , Chelating Agents/chemistry , Radium/chemistry , Radioisotopes/chemistry , Cations/chemistry
5.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 7230, 2021 Dec 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34893651

ABSTRACT

Controlling the properties of heavy element complexes, such as those containing berkelium, is challenging because relativistic effects, spin-orbit and ligand-field splitting, and complex metal-ligand bonding, all dictate the final electronic states of the molecules. While the first two of these are currently beyond experimental control, covalent M‒L interactions could theoretically be boosted through the employment of chelators with large polarizabilities that substantially shift the electron density in the molecules. This theory is tested by ligating BkIII with 4'-(4-nitrophenyl)-2,2':6',2"-terpyridine (terpy*), a ligand with a large dipole. The resultant complex, Bk(terpy*)(NO3)3(H2O)·THF, is benchmarked with its closest electrochemical analog, Ce(terpy*)(NO3)3(H2O)·THF. Here, we show that enhanced Bk‒N interactions with terpy* are observed as predicted. Unexpectedly, induced polarization by terpy* also creates a plane in the molecules wherein the M‒L bonds trans to terpy* are shorter than anticipated. Moreover, these molecules are highly anisotropic and rhombic EPR spectra for the CeIII complex are reported.

6.
Nature ; 599(7885): 421-424, 2021 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34789902

ABSTRACT

Californium (Cf) is currently the heaviest element accessible above microgram quantities. Cf isotopes impose severe experimental challenges due to their scarcity and radiological hazards. Consequently, chemical secrets ranging from the accessibility of 5f/6d valence orbitals to engage in bonding, the role of spin-orbit coupling in electronic structure, and reactivity patterns compared to other f elements, remain locked. Organometallic molecules were foundational in elucidating periodicity and bonding trends across the periodic table1-3, with a twenty-first-century renaissance of organometallic thorium (Th) through plutonium (Pu) chemistry4-12, and to a smaller extent americium (Am)13, transforming chemical understanding. Yet, analogous curium (Cm) to Cf chemistry has lain dormant since the 1970s. Here, we revive air-/moisture-sensitive Cf chemistry through the synthesis and characterization of [Cf(C5Me4H)2Cl2K(OEt2)]n from two milligrams of 249Cf. This bent metallocene motif, not previously structurally authenticated beyond uranium (U)14,15, contains the first crystallographically characterized Cf-C bond. Analysis suggests the Cf-C bond is largely ionic with a small covalent contribution. Lowered Cf 5f orbital energy versus dysprosium (Dy) 4f in the colourless, isoelectronic and isostructural [Dy(C5Me4H)2Cl2K(OEt2)]n results in an orange Cf compound, contrasting with the light-green colour typically associated with Cf compounds16-22.

7.
Chem Sci ; 12(15): 5638-5654, 2021 Mar 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34168798

ABSTRACT

The positive impact of having access to well-defined starting materials for applied actinide technologies - and for technologies based on other elements - cannot be overstated. Of numerous relevant 5f-element starting materials, those in complexing aqueous media find widespread use. Consider acetic acid/acetate buffered solutions as an example. These solutions provide entry into diverse technologies, from small-scale production of actinide metal to preparing radiolabeled chelates for medical applications. However, like so many aqueous solutions that contain actinides and complexing agents, 5f-element speciation in acetic acid/acetate cocktails is poorly defined. Herein, we address this problem and characterize Ac3+ and Cm3+ speciation as a function of increasing acetic acid/acetate concentrations (0.1 to 15 M, pH = 5.5). Results obtained via X-ray absorption and optical spectroscopy show the aquo ion dominated in dilute acetic acid/acetate solutions (0.1 M). Increasing acetic acid/acetate concentrations to 15 M increased complexation and revealed divergent reactivity between early and late actinides. A neutral Ac(H2O)6 (1)(O2CMe)3 (1) compound was the major species in solution for the large Ac3+. In contrast, smaller Cm3+ preferred forming an anion. There were approximately four bound O2CMe1- ligands and one to two inner sphere H2O ligands. The conclusion that increasing acetic acid/acetate concentrations increased acetate complexation was corroborated by characterizing (NH4)2M(O2CMe)5 (M = Eu3+, Am3+ and Cm3+) using single crystal X-ray diffraction and optical spectroscopy (absorption, emission, excitation, and excited state lifetime measurements).

8.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 60(17): 9459-9466, 2021 Apr 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33529478

ABSTRACT

Covalency is often considered to be an influential factor in driving An3+ vs. Ln3+ selectivity invoked by soft donor ligands. This is intensely debated, particularly the extent to which An3+ /Ln3+ covalency differences prevail and manifest as the f-block is traversed, and the effects of periodic breaks beyond Pu. Herein, two Am complexes, [Am{N(E=PPh2 )2 }3 ] (1-Am, E=Se; 2-Am, E=O) are compared to isoradial [Nd{N(E=PPh2 )2 }3 ] (1-Nd, 2-Nd) complexes. Covalent contributions are assessed and compared to U/La and Pu/Ce analogues. Through ab initio calculations grounded in UV-vis-NIR spectroscopy and single-crystal X-ray structures, we observe differences in f orbital involvement between Am-Se and Nd-Se bonds, which are not present in O-donor congeners.

9.
Nat Chem ; 13(3): 284-289, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33318671

ABSTRACT

Developing targeted α-therapies has the potential to transform how diseases are treated. In these interventions, targeting vectors are labelled with α-emitting radioisotopes that deliver destructive radiation discretely to diseased cells while simultaneously sparing the surrounding healthy tissue. Widespread implementation requires advances in non-invasive imaging technologies that rapidly assay therapeutics. Towards this end, positron emission tomography (PET) imaging has emerged as one of the most informative diagnostic techniques. Unfortunately, many promising α-emitting isotopes such as 225Ac and 227Th are incompatible with PET imaging. Here we overcame this obstacle by developing large-scale (Ci-scale) production and purification methods for 134Ce. Subsequent radiolabelling and in vivo PET imaging experiments in a small animal model demonstrated that 134Ce (and its 134La daughter) could be used as a PET imaging candidate for 225AcIII (with reduced 134CeIII) or 227ThIV (with oxidized 134CeIV). Evaluating these data alongside X-ray absorption spectroscopy results demonstrated how success relied on rigorously controlling the CeIII/CeIV redox couple.


Subject(s)
Cerium/chemistry , Lanthanum/chemistry , Positron-Emission Tomography , Radiopharmaceuticals/chemistry , Abdomen/diagnostic imaging , Animals , Cerium Radioisotopes/chemistry , Oxidation-Reduction , Radiopharmaceuticals/metabolism , Tissue Distribution
10.
Nature ; 583(7816): 396-399, 2020 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32669698

ABSTRACT

Curium is unique in the actinide series because its half-filled 5f 7 shell has lower energy than other 5f n configurations, rendering it both redox-inactive and resistant to forming chemical bonds that engage the 5f shell1-3. This is even more pronounced in gadolinium, curium's lanthanide analogue, owing to the contraction of the 4f orbitals with respect to the 5f orbitals4. However, at high pressures metallic curium undergoes a transition from localized to itinerant 5f electrons5. This transition is accompanied by a crystal structure dictated by the magnetic interactions between curium atoms5,6. Therefore, the question arises of whether the frontier metal orbitals in curium(III)-ligand interactions can also be modified by applying pressure, and thus be induced to form metal-ligand bonds with a degree of covalency. Here we report experimental and computational evidence for changes in the relative roles of the 5f/6d orbitals in curium-sulfur bonds in [Cm(pydtc)4]- (pydtc, pyrrolidinedithiocarbamate) at high pressures (up to 11 gigapascals). We compare these results to the spectra of [Nd(pydtc)4]- and of a Cm(III) mellitate that possesses only curium-oxygen bonds. Compared with the changes observed in the [Cm(pydtc)4]- spectra, we observe smaller changes in the f-f transitions in the [Nd(pydtc)4]- absorption spectrum and in the f-f emission spectrum of the Cm(III) mellitate upon pressurization, which are related to the smaller perturbation of the nature of their bonds. These results reveal that the metal orbital contributions to the curium-sulfur bonds are considerably enhanced at high pressures and that the 5f orbital involvement doubles between 0 and 11 gigapascal. Our work implies that covalency in actinides is complex even when dealing with the same ion, but it could guide the selection of ligands to study the effect of pressure on actinide compounds.

11.
Inorg Chem ; 59(15): 10794-10801, 2020 Aug 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32648751

ABSTRACT

In this study, the synthesis, characterization, and pressure response of a 1D californium mellitate (mellitate = 1,2,3,4,5,6-benzenehexacarboxylate) coordination polymer, Cf2(mell)(H2O)10·4H2O (Cf-1), are reported. The Cf-O lengths within the crystal structure are compared to its gadolinium (Gd-1) and holmium (Ho-1) analogs as well. These data show that the average Cf-O bond distance is slightly longer than the average Gd-O bond, consistent with trends in effective ionic radii. UV-vis-NIR absorption spectra as a function of pressure were collected using diamond-anvil techniques for both Cf-1 and Ho-1. These experiments show that the Cf(III) f → f transitions have a stronger dependence on pressure than that of the holmium analog. In the former case, the shift is nearly linear with applied pressure and averages 6.6 cm-1/GPa, whereas in the latter, it is <3 cm-1/GPa.

12.
Inorg Chem ; 59(13): 8642-8646, 2020 Jul 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32623892

ABSTRACT

With the advent of lanthanide-based technologies, there is a clear need to advance the fundamental understanding of 4f-element chelation chemistry. Herein, we contribute to a growing body of lanthanide chelation chemistry and report the synthesis of bimetallic 4f-element complexes within an imine/hemiacetalate framework, Ln2TPTOMe [Ln = lanthanide; TPTOMe = tris(pyridineimine)(Tren)tris(methoxyhemiacetalate); Tren = tris(2-aminoethylamine)]. These products are generated from hydrolysis and methanolysis of the cage ligand tris(pyridinediimine)bis(Tren) (TPT; Tadanobu et al. Chem. Lett. 1993, 22 (5), 859-862) likely facilitated by inductive effects stemming from the Lewis acidic lanthanide cations. These complexes are interesting because they result from imine cleavage to generate two metal binding sites: one pocketed site within the macrocycle and the other terminal site capping a hemiacetalate moiety. A clear demarcation in reactivity is observed between samarium and europium, where the lighter and larger lanthanides generate a mixture of products, Ln2TPTOMe and LnTPT. Meanwhile, the heavier and smaller lanthanides generate exclusively bimetallic Ln2TPTOMe. The cleavage reactivity to form Ln2TPTOMe was extended beyond methanol to include other primary alcohols.

13.
Inorg Chem ; 59(9): 6137-6146, 2020 May 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32302134

ABSTRACT

Increasing access to the short-lived α-emitting radionuclide astatine-211 (211At) has the potential to advance targeted α-therapeutic treatment of disease and to solve challenges facing the medical community. For example, there are numerous technical needs associated with advancing the use of 211At in targeted α-therapy, e.g., improving 211At chelates, developing more effective 211At targeting, and characterizing in vivo 211At behavior. There is an insufficient understanding of astatine chemistry to support these efforts. The chemistry of astatine is one of the least developed of all elements on the periodic table, owing to its limited supply and short half-life. Increasing access to 211At could help address these issues and advance understanding of 211At chemistry in general. We contribute here an extraction chromatographic processing method that simplifies 211At production in terms of purification. It utilizes the commercially available Pre-Filter resin to rapidly (<1.5 h) isolate 211At from irradiated bismuth targets (Bi decontamination factors ≥876 000), in reasonable yield (68-55%) and in a form that is compatible for subsequent in vivo study. We are excited about the potential of this procedure to address 211At supply and processing/purification problems.

14.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(18): 8352-8366, 2020 05 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32249571

ABSTRACT

A versatile synthetic route to distannyl-substituted polyarenes was developed via double radical peri-annulations. The cyclization precursors were equipped with propargylic OMe traceless directing groups (TDGs) for regioselective Sn-radical attack at the triple bonds. The two peri-annulations converge at a variety of polycyclic cores to yield expanded difunctionalized polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). This approach can be extended to triple peri-annulations, where annulations are coupled with a radical cascade that connects two preexisting aromatic cores via a formal C-H activation step. The installed Bu3Sn groups serve as chemical handles for further functionalization via direct cross-coupling, iodination, or protodestannylation and increase solubility of the products in organic solvents. Photophysical studies reveal that the Bu3Sn-substituted PAHs are moderately fluorescent, and their protodestannylation results in an up to 10-fold fluorescence quantum yield enhancement. DFT calculations identified the most likely possible mechanism of this complex chemical transformation involving two independent peri-cyclizations at the central core.

15.
Inorg Chem ; 58(15): 9602-9612, 2019 Aug 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31290310

ABSTRACT

Efforts to quantitatively reduce CfIII → CfII in solution as well as studies of its cyclic voltammetry have been hindered by its scarcity, significant challenges associated with manipulating an unusually intense γ emitter, small reaction scales, the need for nonaqueous solvents, and its radiolytic effects on ligands and solvents. In an effort to overcome these impediments, we report on the stabilization of CfII by encapsulation in 2.2.2-cryptand and comparisons with the readily reducible lanthanides, Sm3+, Eu3+, and Yb3+. Cyclic voltammetry measurements suggest that CfIII/II displays electrochemical behavior with characteristics of both SmIII/II and YbIII/II. The °E1/2 values of -1.525 and -1.660 V (vs Fc/Fc+ in tetrahydrofuran (THF)) for [Cf(2.2.2-crypt)]3+/2+ and [Sm(2.2.2-crypt)]3+/2+, respectively, are similar. However, the ΔE values upon complexation by 2.2.2-cryptand for CfIII/II more closely parallels YbIII/II with postencapsulation shifts of 705 and 715 mV, respectively, whereas the shift of SmIII/II (520 mV) mirrors that of EuIII/II (524 mV). This suggests more structural similarities between CfII and YbII in solution than with SmII that likely originates from more similar ionic radii and local coordination environments, a supposition that is corroborated by crystallographic and extended X-ray absorption fine structure measurements from other systems. Competitive-ion binding experiments between EuIII/II, SmIII/II, and YbIII/II were also performed and show less favorable binding by YbIII/II. Connectivity structures of [Ln(2.2.2-cryptand)(THF)][BPh4]2 (Ln = EuII, SmII) are reported to show the important role that THF plays in these redox reactions.

16.
Chemistry ; 25(44): 10251-10261, 2019 Aug 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30908747

ABSTRACT

The merging of small-scale syntheses and rapid crystallization methods have provided access to crystalline samples of berkelium (Z=97) and californium (Z=98) coordination complexes and compounds that can be interrogated with a suite of spectroscopic tools and structural elucidation approaches that have come online over the last 20 years. The combination of this experimental data with relativistic theoretical methods that capture the effects of spin-orbit coupling and scalar relativistic effects have allowed us to understand the electronic structure of berkelium and californium compounds at a level of detail that was not previously possible. The harbinger of this new era of post-curium chemistry was the synthesis and characterization of [Cf{B6 O8 (OH)5 }]. This compound possesses a structure type that is distinct from earlier actinide borates, a reduction in coordination number for californium, contracted Cf-O bond lengths, a substantially reduced magnetic moment with respect to the calculated free-ion moment and, most importantly, vibronically coupled broadband photoluminescence. Ligand-field analysis also showed that the splitting of the ground state was larger than typically found in the f-block elements, and when taken together places its overall electronic structure as a hybrid of d- and f-block components. The discovery of the unusual properties of this compound has led to the development of large families of 4f and 5f coordination complexes, in an effort to uncover the underlying origin of the electronic structure oddities, and whether there really is a sharp onset of these changes at californium. This in turn pushed the development of far more challenging berkelium chemistry (from a radiologic standpoint) because the half-life of the isotopes decreases from 351 years for 249 Cf to 330 days for 249 Bk. This short review details some of the chemistry that has been reported over the last 15 years, and its consequences for understanding the periodic table.

17.
Chemistry ; 25(13): 3248-3252, 2019 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30716170

ABSTRACT

[M(EtBTP)3 ][BPh4 ]3 ⋅3 CH3 CN (M=Nd, Am; EtBTP=2,6-bis(5,6-diethyl-1,2,4-triazin-3-yl)pyridine) have been synthesized from reactions of MCl3 ⋅n H2 O with EtBTP in acetonitrile followed by anion metathesis. Structural analysis reveals that these compounds contain M3+ cations bound by tridentate EtBTP ligands to create a tricapped trigonal prismatic geometry around the metal centers. Collection of high-resolution, single-crystal X-ray diffraction data also allowed reduction in bond lengths esd's, such that a slight contraction of Δ=0.0158(18) Šin the Am-N versus Nd-N bond lengths was observed, even though these cations ostensibly have matching ionic radii. Theoretical evaluation revealed enhanced metal-ligand bonding through back donation in the [Am(EtBTP)3 ]3+ complex that is absent in [Nd(EtBTP)3 ]3+ .

18.
Inorg Chem ; 58(5): 3026-3032, 2019 Mar 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30767517

ABSTRACT

Perovskite ceramics have been extensively studied as host matrixes for radionuclide entrapment for nuclear waste disposal. As an expansion of these investigations, cerium, neodymium, and plutonium were incorporated into a perovskite phase, ACu3FeTi3O12 (A = Nd, Ce, Pu), using sol-gel methods under oxidizing and reducing atmospheres. The targeted materials contained varying levels of Ce3+ and Nd3+ on the A site, yielding potential compositions of Nd1- xCe xCu3FeTi3O12 ( x = 0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.8). However, interrogation of these materials shows that the maximum Ce3+ loading is achieved near x ≈ 0.2. A single composition with plutonium was targeted, Nd0.9Pu0.1Cu3FeTi3O12, in order to properly model more realistic loading levels for a repository-destined material. These compounds were characterized using powder X-ray diffraction with Rietveld refinements of the structures and by a variety of spectroscopic techniques. The data suggest that, in order to achieve Pu3+ substitution onto the A sites in the Nd0.9Pu0.1Cu3FeTi3O12, a reducing atmosphere must be employed. Otherwise, the redox activity of plutonium results in substitution onto multiple sites in the material as well as the formation of secondary phases such as TiO2.

19.
Inorg Chem ; 58(5): 3457-3465, 2019 Mar 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30788962

ABSTRACT

The reaction of SmI2 with dibenzo-30-crown-10 (DB30C10), followed by metathesis with [Bu4N][BPh4], allows for the isolation of [SmII(DB30C10)][BPh4]2 as bright-red crystals in good yield. Exposure of [Sm(DB30C10)]2+ to solvents containing trace water results in the conversion to the dinuclear SmIII complex, Sm2(DB30C10)(OH)2I4. Structural analysis of both complexes shows substantial rearrangement of the crown ether from a folded, Pac-Man form with SmII to a twisted conformation with SmIII. The optical properties of [SmII(DB30C10)][BPh4]2 exhibit a strong temperature dependence and change from broad-band absorption features indicative of domination by 5d states to fine features characteristic of 4f → 4f transitions at low temperatures. Examination of the electronic structure of these complexes via ab initio wave function calculations (SO-CASSCF) shows that the ground state of SmII in [SmII(DB30C10)]2+ is a 4f6 state with low-lying 4f55d1 states, where the latter states have been lowered in energy by ∼12 000 cm-1 with respect to the free ion. The decacoordination of the SmII cation by the crown ether is responsible for this alteration in the energies of the excited state and demonstrates the ability to tune the electronic structure of SmII.

20.
Dalton Trans ; 47(41): 14452-14461, 2018 Oct 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30168828

ABSTRACT

Characterizing how actinide properties change across the f-element series is critical for improving predictive capabilities and solving many nuclear problems facing our society. Unfortunately, it is difficult to make direct comparisons across the 5f-element series because so little is known about trans-plutonium elements. Results described herein help to address this issue through isolation of An(S2CNEt2)3(N2C12H8) (Am, Cm, and Cf). These findings included the first single crystal X-ray diffraction measurements of Cm-S (mean of 2.86 ± 0.04 Å) and Cf-S (mean of 2.84 ± 0.04 Å) bond distances. Furthermore, they highlight the potential of An(S2CNEt2)3(N2C12H8) for providing a test bed for comparative analyses of actinide versus lanthanide bonding interactions.

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