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1.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 26(11): 8734-8747, 2024 Mar 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38416412

RESUMEN

Characterization of paramagnetic compounds, in particular regarding the detailed conformation and electronic structure, remains a challenge, and - still today it often relies solely on the use of X-ray crystallography, thus limiting the access to electronic structure information. This is particularly true for lanthanide elements that are often associated with peculiar structural and electronic features in relation to their partially filled f-shell. Here, we develop a methodology based on the combined use of state-of-the-art magnetic resonance spectroscopies (EPR and solid-state NMR) and computational approaches as well as magnetic susceptibility measurements to determine the electronic structure and geometry of a paramagnetic Yb(III) alkyl complex, Yb(III)[CH(SiMe3)2]3, a prototypical example, which contains notable structural features according to X-ray crystallography. Each of these techniques revealed specific information about the geometry and electronic structure of the complex. Taken together, both EPR and NMR, augmented by quantum chemical calculations, provide a detailed and complementary understanding of such paramagnetic compounds. In particular, the EPR and NMR signatures point to the presence of three-centre-two-electron Yb-γ-Me-ß-Si secondary metal-ligand interactions in this otherwise tri-coordinate metal complex, similarly to its diamagnetic Lu analogues. The electronic structure of Yb(III) can be described as a single 4f13 configuration, while an unusually large crystal-field splitting results in a thermally isolated ground Kramers doublet. Furthermore, the computational data indicate that the Yb-carbon bond contains some π-character, reminiscent of the so-called α-H agostic interaction.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(46): 28164-28173, 2022 Nov 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36398658

RESUMEN

Perovskite-type oxhydrides such as BaTiO3-xHy exhibit mixed hydride ion and electron conduction and are an attractive class of materials for developing energy storage devices. However, the underlying mechanism of electric conductivity and its relation to the composition of the material remains unclear. Here we report detailed insights into the hydride local environment, the electronic structure and hydride conduction dynamics of barium titanium oxyhydride. We demonstrate that DFT-assisted solid-state NMR is an excellent tool for differentiating between the different feasible electronic structures in these solids. Our results indicate that upon reduction of BaTiO3 the introduced electrons are delocalized among all Ti atoms forming a bandstate. Furthermore, each vacated anion site is reoccupied by at most a single hydride, or else remains vacant. This single occupied bandstate structure persists at different hydrogen concentrations (y = 0.13-0.31) and a wide range of temperatures (∼100-300 K).

3.
J Magn Reson ; 340: 107235, 2022 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35644097

RESUMEN

A combination of solid-state NMR methods for the extraction of 23Na shift and quadrupolar parameters in the as-synthesized, structurally complex NaMnO2 Na-ion cathode material, under magic-angle spinning (MAS) is presented. We show that the integration of the Magic-Angle Turning experiment with Rotor-Assisted Population transfer (RAPT) can be used both to identify shifts and to extract a range of magnitudes for their quadrupolar couplings. We also demonstrate the applicability of the two-dimensional one pulse (TOP) based double-sheared Satellite Transition Magic-Angle Spinning (TOP-STMAS) showing how it can yield a spectrum with separated shift and second-order quadrupolar anisotropies, which in turn can be used to analyze a quadrupolar lineshape free of anisotropic bulk magnetic susceptibility (ABMS) induced shift dispersion and determine both isotropic shift and quadrupolar products. Combining all these experiments, the shift and quadrupolar parameters for all observed Na environments were extracted and yielded excellent agreement with the density functional theory (DFT) based models that were reported in previous literature. We expect these methods to open the door for new possibilities for solid-state NMR to probe half-integer quadrupolar nuclei in paramagnetic materials and other systems exhibiting large shift dispersion.


Asunto(s)
Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Anisotropía , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética/métodos
4.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 4334, 2021 Jul 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34267194

RESUMEN

Structural and morphological control of crystalline nanoparticles is crucial in the field of heterogeneous catalysis and the development of "reaction specific" catalysts. To achieve this, colloidal chemistry methods are combined with ab initio calculations in order to define the reaction parameters, which drive chemical reactions to the desired crystal nucleation and growth path. Key in this procedure is the experimental verification of the predicted crystal facets and their corresponding electronic structure, which in case of nanostructured materials becomes extremely difficult. Here, by employing 31P solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance aided by advanced density functional theory calculations to obtain and assign the Knight shifts, we succeed in determining the crystal and electronic structure of the terminating surfaces of ultrafine Ni2P nanoparticles at atomic scale resolution. Our work highlights the potential of ssNMR nanocrystallography as a unique tool in the emerging field of facet-engineered nanocatalysts.

5.
Inorg Chem ; 60(7): 4829-4840, 2021 Apr 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33745276

RESUMEN

Reactions of di(2-pyridyl) ketone, (py)2CO, with indium(III) halides in CH3NO2 have been studied, and a new transformation of the ligand has been revealed. In the presence of InIII, the C═O bond of (py)2CO is subjected to nucleophilic attack by the carbanion -:CH2NO2, yielding the dinuclear complexes [In2X4{(py)2C(CH2NO2)(O)}2] (X = Cl, 1; X = Br, 2; X = I, 3) in moderate to good yields. The alkoxo oxygens of the two η1:η2:η1-(py)2C(CH2NO2)(O)- ligands doubly bridge the InIII centers and create a {In2(µ2-OR)2}4+ core. Two pyridyl nitrogens of different organic ligands and two terminal halogeno ions complete a distorted-octahedral stereochemistry around each In(III) ion. After maximum excitation at 360 or 380 nm, the solid chloro complex 1 emits blue light at 420 and 440 nm at room temperature, the emission being attributed to charge transfer within the coordinated organic ligand. Solid-state 115In NMR spectra, in combination with DFT calculations, of 1-3 have been studied in detail at both 9.4 and 14.1 T magnetic fields. The nuclear quadrupolar and chemical shift parameters provide valuable findings concerning the electric field gradients and magnetic shielding at the nuclei of indium, respectively. The experimentally derived CQ values are 40 ± 3 MHz for 1, 46 ± 5 MHz for 2, and 50 ± 10 and 64 ± 7 MHz for the two crystallographically independent InIII sites for 3, while the δiso values fall in the range 130 ± 30 to -290 ± 60 ppm. The calculated CQ and asymmetry parameter (ηQ) values are fully consistent with the experimental values for 1 and 2 and are in fairly good agreement for 3. The results have been analyzed and discussed in terms of the known (1, 3) and proposed (2) structural features of the complexes, demonstrating that 115In NMR is an effective solid-state technique for the study of indium(III) complexes.

6.
J Magn Reson ; 324: 106911, 2021 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33482528

RESUMEN

We present a complete description of frequency-swept adiabatic pulses applied to isolated spin-1/2 nuclei with a shift anisotropy in solid materials under magic-angle spinning. Our theoretical framework unifies the existing descriptions of adiabatic pulses in the high-power regime, where the radiofrequency (RF) amplitude is greater than twice the spinning frequency, and the low-power regime, where the RF power is less than the spinning frequency, and so links the short high-powered adiabatic pulse (SHAP) and single-sideband-selective adiabatic pulses (S3AP) schemes used in paramagnetic solid-state NMR. We also identify a hitherto unidentified third regime intermediate between the low- and high-power regimes, and separated from them by rotary resonance conditions. We show that the prevailing benchmark of inversion performance based on (super) adiabatic factors is only applicable in the high- and intermediate-power regimes, but fails to account both for the poor performance at rotary resonance, and the impressive inversion seen in the low-power regime. For low-power pulses, which are non-adiabatic according to this definition of (super) adiabaticity, the effective Floquet Hamiltonian in the jolting frame reveals "hidden" (super) adiabaticity. The theory is demonstrated using a combination of simulation and experiment, and is used to refine the practical recommendations for the experimentalist who wishes to use these pulses.

7.
Magn Reson Chem ; 58(11): 1055-1070, 2020 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31997384

RESUMEN

A new approach for processing satellite-transition magic-angle spinning (STMAS) and multiple-quantum magic-angle spinning (MQMAS) data, based on the two-dimensional one-pulse (TOP) method, which separates the second-rank quadrupolar anisotropy and paramagnetic shift interactions via a double shearing transformation, is described. This method is particularly relevant in paramagnetic systems, where substantial inhomogeneous broadening may broaden the lineshapes. Furthermore, it possesses an advantage over the conventional processing of MQMAS and STMAS spectra because it overcomes the limitation on the spectral width in the indirect dimension imposed by rotor synchronization of the sampling interval. This method was applied experimentally to the 27 Al solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance of a series of yttrium aluminum garnets (YAGs) doped with different lanthanide ions, from which the quadrupolar parameters of paramagnetically shifted and bulk unshifted sites were extracted. These parameters were then compared with density functional theory calculations, which permitted a better understanding of the local structure of Ln substituent ions in the YAG lattice.

8.
Solid State Nucl Magn Reson ; 101: 51-62, 2019 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31121358

RESUMEN

Two new two-dimensional, broadband, solid-state NMR experiments for separating and correlating the quadrupolar and shift interactions of spin I=1 nuclei in paramagnetic systems are proposed. The new pulse sequences incorporate the short, high-power adiabatic pulses (SHAPs) into the shifting d-echo experiment of Walder et al. [J. Chem. Phys., 142, 014201 (2015)], in two different ways, giving double and quadruple adiabatic shifting d-echo sequences. These new experiments have the advantage over previous methods of both suppressing spectral artefacts due to pulse imperfections, and exhibiting a broader excitation bandwidth. Both experiments are analysed with theoretical calculations and simulations, and are applied experimentally to the 2H NMR of deuterated CuCl2 ⋅2H2O, and two deuterated samples of the ion conductor oxyhydride BaTiO3-xHy prepared using two different methods. For the CuCl2 ⋅2H2O sample, both new methods obtain very high-quality spectra from which the parameters describing the shift and quadrupolar interaction tensors, and their relative orientation, were extracted. The two BaTiO3-xHy samples exhibited different local hydride environments with different tensor parameters. The 2H spectra of these oxyhydrides exhibit inhomogeneous broadening of the 2H shifts, and so whilst the quadrupolar interaction parameters were easily extracted, the measurement of the shift parameters was more complex. However, effective shift parameters were extracted, which combine the effects of both the paramagnetic shift tensor and the inhomogeneous broadening.

9.
J Hazard Mater ; 244-245: 563-9, 2013 Jan 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23245880

RESUMEN

Aiming the prediction of ionic liquids' (ILs) human toxicity, an automated carboxylesterase activity assay was developed. The method was implemented on a sequential injection analysis (SIA) system and relied on the hydrolysis of 4-methylumbelliferyl acetate by the enzyme, to produce the fluorescent compound 4-methylumbelliferone (λ(exc)=365 nm; λ(em)=460 nm). The adopted approach was based on activity/inhibition assays in which the reduction of enzyme activity was denoted by a decrease of fluorescence. The activity assays were performed in aqueous media and in the presence of increasing concentrations of seven commercially available ILs and sodium bis(p-nitrophenyl) phosphate, a strong inhibitor of carboxylesterase. The inhibitory effects were quantified by means of the calculation of half maximal inhibitory effective concentration (EC(50)) values that were between 38 and 134 µmol L(-1). This allowed us to perform some considerations about the toxicity of the compounds. The less and more toxic ILs found in this study were emim [Ms] and tbph [Ms], respectively. The developed SIA methodology is robust and exhibits good repeatability in all the tested conditions (rsd<5.0%, n=10). At the same time a reduction of costs was attained by reduced consumption of reagents and minimal effluent production (2 mL per cycle).


Asunto(s)
Bioensayo/métodos , Carboxilesterasa/metabolismo , Líquidos Iónicos/toxicidad , Umbeliferonas/metabolismo , Automatización , Carboxilesterasa/antagonistas & inhibidores , Humanos , Hidrólisis
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