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1.
Chem Sci ; 15(18): 6874-6883, 2024 May 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38725506

RESUMEN

Synthetic strategies to isolate molecular complexes of lanthanides, other than cerium, in the +4 oxidation state remain elusive, with only four complexes of Tb(iv) isolated so far. Herein, we present a new approach for the stabilization of Tb(iv) using a siloxide tripodal trianionic ligand, which allows the control of unwanted ligand rearrangements, while tuning the Ln(iii)/Ln(iv) redox-couple. The Ln(iii) complexes, [LnIII((OSiPh2Ar)3-arene)(THF)3] (1-LnPh) and [K(toluene){LnIII((OSiPh2Ar)3-arene)(OSiPh3)}] (2-LnPh) (Ln = Ce, Tb, Pr), of the (HOSiPh2Ar)3-arene ligand were prepared. The redox properties of these complexes were compared to those of the Ln(iii) analogue complexes, [LnIII((OSi(OtBu)2Ar)3-arene)(THF)] (1-LnOtBu) and [K(THF)6][LnIII((OSi(OtBu)2Ar)3-arene)(OSiPh3)] (2-LnOtBu) (Ln = Ce, Tb), of the less electron-donating siloxide trianionic ligand, (HOSi(OtBu)2Ar)3-arene. The cyclic voltammetry studies showed a cathodic shift in the oxidation potential for the cerium and terbium complexes of the more electron-donating phenyl substituted scaffold (1-LnPh) compared to those of the tert-butoxy (1-LnOtBu) ligand. Furthermore, the addition of the -OSiPh3 ligand further shifts the potential cathodically, making the Ln(iv) ion even more accessible. Notably, the Ce(iv) complexes, [CeIV((OSi(OtBu)2Ar)3-arene)(OSiPh3)] (3-CeOtBu) and [CeIV((OSiPh2Ar)3-arene)(OSiPh3)(THF)2] (3-CePh), were prepared by chemical oxidation of the Ce(iii) analogues. Chemical oxidation of the Tb(iii) and Pr(iii) complexes (2-LnPh) was also possible, in which the Tb(iv) complex, [TbIV((OSiPh2Ar)3-arene)(OSiPh3)(MeCN)2] (3-TbPh), was isolated and crystallographically characterized, yielding the first example of a Tb(iv) supported by a polydentate ligand. The versatility and robustness of these siloxide arene-anchored platforms will allow further development in the isolation of more oxidizing Ln(iv) ions, widening the breadth of high-valent Ln chemistry.

2.
Chem Sci ; 15(18): 6842-6852, 2024 May 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38725514

RESUMEN

End-on binding of dinitrogen to low valent metal centres is common in transition metal chemistry but remains extremely rare in f-elements chemistry. In particular, heterobimetallic end-on N2 bridged complexes of lanthanides are unprecedented despite their potential relevance in catalytic reduction of dinitrogen. Here we report the synthesis and characterization of a series of N2 bridged heterobimetallic complexes of U(iii), Ln(iii) and Ln(ii) which were prepared by reacting the Fe dinitrogen complex [Fe(depe)2(N2)] (depe = 1,2-bis(diethylphosphino)-ethane), complex A with [MIII{N(SiMe3)2}3] (M = U, Ce, Sm, Dy, Tm) and [LnII{N(SiMe3)2}2], (Ln = Sm, Yb). Despite the lack of reactivity of the U(iii), Ln(iii) and Ln(ii) amide complexes with dinitrogen, the end-on dinitrogen bridged heterobimetallic complexes [{Fe(depe)2}(µ-η1:η1-N2)(M{N(SiMe3)2}3)], 1-M (M = U(iii), Ce(iii), Sm(iii), Dy(iii) and Tm(iii)), [{Fe(depe)2}(µ-η1:η1-N2)(Ln{N(SiMe3)2}2)], 1*-Ln (Ln = Sm(ii), Yb(ii)) and [{Fe(depe)2(µ-η1:η1-N2)}2{SmII{N(SiMe3)2}2}], 3 could be prepared. The synthetic method used here allowed to isolate unprecedented end-on bridging N2 complexes of divalent lanthanides which provide relevant structural models for the species involved in the catalytic reduction of dinitrogen by Fe/Sm(ii) systems. Computational studies showed an essentially electrostatic interaction of the end-on bridging N2 with both Ln(iii) and Ln(ii) complexes with the degree of N2 activation correlating with their Lewis acidity. In contrast, a back-bonding covalent contribution to the U(iii)-N2Fe bond was identified by computational studies. Computational studies also suggest that end-on binding of N2 to U(iii) and Ln(ii) complexes is favoured for the iron-bound N2 compared to free N2 due to the higher N2 polarization.

3.
Inorg Chem ; 2024 Jan 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38217471

RESUMEN

U(IV) cyclometalated complexes have shown rich reactivity, but their low oxidation state analogues still remain rare. Herein, we report the isolation of [K(2.2.2-cryptand)][UIII{N(SiMe3)2}2(κ2-C,N-CH2SiMe2NSiMe3)], 1, from the reduction of [UIII{N(SiMe)2}3] with KC8 and 2.2.2-cryptand at room temperature. Cyclic voltammetry studies demonstrate that 1 has a reduction potential similar to that of the previously reported [K(2.2.2-cryptand)][UII{N(SiMe)2}3] (Epc = -2.6 V versus Fc+/0 and Epc = -2.8 V versus Fc+/0, respectively). Complex 1, indeed, shows similar reducing abilities upon reactions with 4,4'-bipyridine, 2,2'-bipyridine, and 1-azidoadamantane. Interestingly, 1 was also found to be the first example of a mononuclear U(III) complex that is capable of reducing pyridine. In addition, it is shown that a wide variety of substrates can be inserted into the U-C bond, forming new U(III) metallacycles. These results highlight that cyclometalated U(III) complexes can serve as versatile precursors for a broad range of reactivity and for assembling a variety of novel chemical architectures.

4.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(6): e202317346, 2024 Feb 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38100190

RESUMEN

The high stability of the + IVoxidation state limits thorium redox reactivity. Here we report the synthesis and the redox reactivity of two Th(IV) complexes supported by the arene-tethered tris(siloxide) tripodal ligands [(KOSiR2 Ar)3 -arene)]. The two-electron reduction of these Th(IV) complexes generates the doubly reduced [KTh((OSi(Ot Bu)2 Ar)3 -arene)(THF)2 ] (2OtBu ) and [K(2.2.2-cryptand)][Th((OSiPh2 Ar)3 -arene)(THF)2 ](2Ph -crypt) where the formal oxidation state of Th is +II. Structural and computational studies indicate that the reduction occurred at the arene anchor of the ligand. The robust tripodal frameworks store in the arene anchor two electrons that become available at the metal center for the two-electron reduction of a broad range of substrates (N2 O, COT, CHT, Ph2 N2 , Ph3 PS and O2 ) while retaining the ligand framework. This work shows that arene-tethered tris(siloxide) tripodal ligands allow implementation of two-electron redox chemistry at the thorium center while retaining the ligand framework unchanged.

5.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 60(1): 55-58, 2023 Dec 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38015470

RESUMEN

The silsesquioxane ligand (iBu)7Si7O9(OH)3 (iBuPOSSH3) is revealed as an attractive system for the assembly of robust polynuclear complexes of uranium(III) and allowed the isolation of the first example of a trinuclear U(III) complex ([U3(iBuPOSS)3]) that exhibits magnetic communication and promotes dinitrogen reduction in the presence of reducing agent.

6.
Chem Sci ; 14(46): 13485-13494, 2023 Nov 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38033909

RESUMEN

Understanding the role of multimetallic cooperativity and of alkali ion-binding in the second coordination sphere is important for the design of complexes that can promote dinitrogen (N2) cleavage and functionalization. Herein, we compare the reaction products and mechanism of N2 reduction of the previously reported K2-bound dinuclear uranium(iii) complex, [K2{[UIII(OSi(OtBu)3)3]2(µ-O)}], B, with those of the analogous dinuclear uranium(iii) complexes, [K(2.2.2-cryptand)][K{UIII(OSi(OtBu)3)3}2(µ-O)], 1, and [K(2.2.2-cryptand)]2[{UIII(OSi(OtBu)3)3}2(µ-O)], 2, where one or two K+ ions have been removed from the second coordination sphere by addition of 2.2.2-cryptand. In this study, we found that the complete removal of the K+ ions from the inner coordination sphere leads to an enhanced reducing ability, as confirmed by cyclic voltammetry studies, of the resulting complex 2, and yields two new species upon N2 addition, namely the U(iii)/U(iv) complex, [K(2.2.2-cryptand)][{UIII(OSi(OtBu)3)3}(µ-O){UIV(OSi(OtBu)3)3}], 3, and the N2 cleavage product, the bis-nitride, terminal-oxo complex, [K(2.2.2-cryptand)]2[{UV(OSi(OtBu)3)3}(µ-N)2{UVI(OSi(OtBu)3)2(κ-O)}], 4. We propose that the formation of these two products involves a tetranuclear uranium-N2 intermediate that can only form in the absence of coordinated alkali ions, resulting in a six-electron transfer and cleavage of N2, demonstrating the possibility of a three-electron transfer from U(iii) to N2. These results give an insight into the relationship between alkali ion binding modes, multimetallic cooperativity and reactivity, and demonstrate how these parameters can be tuned to cleave and functionalize N2.

7.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(48): 26435-26443, 2023 Dec 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37991736

RESUMEN

Dinitrogen cleavage provides an attractive but poorly studied route to the assembly of multimetallic nitride clusters. Here, we show that the monoelectron reduction of the dinitrogen complex [{U(OC6H2-But3-2,4,6)3}2(µ-η2:η2-N2)], 1, allows us to generate, for the first time, a uranium complex presenting a rare triply reduced N2 moiety ((µ-η2:η2-N2)•3-). Importantly, the bound dinitrogen can be further reduced, affording the U4N4 cubane cluster, 3, and the U6N6 edge-shared cubane cluster, 4, thus showing that (N2)•3- can be an intermediate in nitride formation. The tetranitride cluster showed high reactivity with electrophiles, yielding ammonia quantitatively upon acid addition and promoting CO cleavage to yield quantitative conversion of nitride into cyanide. These results show that dinitrogen reduction provides a versatile route for the assembly of large highly reactive nitride clusters, with U6N6 providing the first example of a molecular nitride of any metal formed from a complete cleavage of three N2 molecules.

8.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(29): 16271-16283, 2023 Jul 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37440295

RESUMEN

The synthesis of molecular uranium complexes in oxidation states lower than +3 remains a challenge despite the interest for their multielectron transfer reactivity and electronic structures. Herein, we report the one- and two-electron reduction of a U(III) complex supported by an arene-tethered tris(siloxide) tripodal ligand leading to the mono-reduced complexes, [K(THF)U((OSi(OtBu)2Ar)3-arene)(THF)] (2) and [K(2.2.2-cryptand)][U((OSi(OtBu)2Ar)3-arene)(THF)] (2-crypt), and to the di-reduced U(I) synthons, [K2(THF)3U((OSi(OtBu)2Ar)3-arene)]∞ (3) and [(K(2.2.2-cryptand))]2[U((OSi(OtBu)2Ar)3-arene)] (3-crypt). EPR and UV/vis/NIR spectroscopies, magnetic, cyclic voltammetry, and computational studies provide strong evidence that complex 2-crypt is best described as a U(II), where the U(II) is stabilized by δ-bonding interactions between the arene anchor and the uranium frontier orbitals, whereas complexes 3 and 3-crypt are best described as having a U(III) ion supported by the di-reduced arene anchor. Three quasi-reversible redox waves at E1/2 = -3.27, -2.45, and -1.71 V were identified by cyclic voltammetry studies and were assigned to the U(IV)/U(III), U(III)/U(II), and U(II)/U(III)-(arene)2- redox couples. The ability of complexes 2 and 3 in transferring two- and three-electrons, respectively, to oxidizing substrates was confirmed by the reaction of 2 with azobenzene (PhNNPh), leading to the U(IV) complex, [K(Et2O)U((OSi(OtBu)2Ar)3-arene)(PhNNPh)(THF)] (4), and of complex 3 with cycloheptatriene, yielding the U(IV) complex, [(K(Et2O)2)U((OSi(OtBu)2Ar)3-arene)(η7-C7H7)]∞ (6). These results demonstrate that the arene-tethered tris(siloxide) tripodal ligand provides an excellent platform for accessing low-valent uranium chemistry while implementing multielectron transfer pathways as shown by the reactivity of complex 3, which provides the third example of a U(I) synthon.

9.
Chem Sci ; 14(22): 6011-6021, 2023 Jun 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37293643

RESUMEN

The chemistry of lanthanides is limited to one electron transfer reactions due to the difficulty of accessing multiple oxidation states. Here we report that a redox-active ligand combining three siloxides with an arene ring in a tripodal ligand can stabilize cerium complexes in four different redox states and can promote multielectron redox reactivity in cerium complexes. Ce(iii) and Ce(iv) complexes [(LO3)Ce(THF)] (1) and [(LO3)CeCl] (2) (LO3 = 1,3,5-(2-OSi(OtBu)2C6H4)3C6H3) were synthesized and fully characterized. Remarkably the one-electron reduction and the unprecedented two-electron reduction of the tripodal Ce(iii) complex are easily achieved to yield reduced complexes [K(2.2.2-cryptand)][(LO3)Ce(THF)] (3) and [K2{(LO3)Ce(Et2O)3}] (5) that are formally "Ce(ii)" and "Ce(i)" analogues. Structural analysis, UV and EPR spectroscopy and computational studies indicate that in 3 the cerium oxidation state is in between +II and +III with a partially reduced arene. In 5 the arene is doubly reduced, but the removal of potassium results in a redistribution of electrons on the metal. The electrons in both 3 and 5 are stored onto δ-bonds allowing the reduced complexes to be described as masked "Ce(ii)" and "Ce(i)". Preliminary reactivity studies show that these complexes act as masked Ce(ii) and Ce(i) in redox reactions with oxidizing substrates such as Ag+, CO2, I2 and S8 effecting both one- and two-electron transfers that are not accessible in classical cerium chemistry.

10.
Chem Sci ; 14(24): 6493-6521, 2023 Jun 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37350843

RESUMEN

The chemistry of actinide-nitrides has witnessed significant advances in the last ten years with a large focus on uranium and a few breakthroughs with thorium. Following the early discovery of the first terminal and bridging nitride complexes, various synthetic routes to uranium nitrides have since been identified, although the range of ligands capable of stabilizing uranium nitrides still remains scarce. In particular, both terminal- and bridging-nitrides possess attractive advantages for potential reactivity, especially in light of the recent development of uranium complexes for dinitrogen reduction and functionalization. The first molecular thorium bridged-nitride complexes have also been recently identified, anticipating the possibility of expanding nitride chemistry not only to low-valent thorium, but also to the transuranic elements.

11.
Inorg Chem ; 62(20): 7982-7992, 2023 May 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37165631

RESUMEN

Nine new coordination polymers based on U(IV) and Th(IV) were synthesized solvothermally utilizing four different trianionic carboxylates (H3BHTC = biphenyl-3,4',5-tricarboxylic acid, H3NTB = 4,4',4″-nitrilotribenzoic acid, H3BTB = 4,4',4″-benzene-1,3,5-triyl-tris(benzoic acid), H3BTE = 4,4',4″-(1,3,5-benzenetriyltri-2,1-ethynediyl)trisbenzoic acid). The influence of the ligand architecture, the pH, the stoichiometry, the nature of the metal, and the concentration on the structure and dimensionality of the final actinide assembly is discussed. The H3BHTC ligand allowed the synthesis of a cationic three-dimensional (3D) framework [U(BHTC)(DMF)3]I (1), which is the first example of a cationic U(IV) polymer. The H3NTB ligand yielded the 3D neutral polymer [U3(NTB)4] (2) or the two-dimensional (2D) cationic polymer [U(NTB)(NMP)3]I (3), depending on the solvent. When conditions leading to (2) were used with a Th(IV) precursor, the 2D neutral polymer [Th(NTB)(DMF)3Cl] (4) was obtained. The ligand H3BTB allowed the synthesis of two 3D cationic networks [U(BTB)(DMF)2]I (5) and [U(BTB)(DMF)3]I (7) or the neutral 3D analogue [U3(BTB)4] (6), depending on the precursor's oxidation state and the acidity of the reaction mixture. The ligand H3BTE allowed the synthesis of the anionic 3D [(CH3)2NH2][U2(BTE)3] (8) framework featuring large accessible pores, and under the same conditions, an isostructural Th(IV) was also obtained [(CH3)2NH2][Th2(BTE)3] (8-Th). All isolated coordination polymers were characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction (SCXRD). The Langmuir surface areas of the U(IV) polymers (2), (7), and (8) increased from 140 to 310 m2/g owing to the increasing size of the linker, with polymer (8) showing a value that is comparable to the highest surface area reported to date. The effect of the postsynthetic solvent substitution was also studied, revealing a crystal-to-crystal transformation of the cationic framework (7) to the neutral framework [U(BTB)(THF)I] (7c).

12.
Environ Sci Technol ; 57(19): 7537-7546, 2023 05 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37133831

RESUMEN

The biological reduction of soluble U(VI) complexes to form immobile U(IV) species has been proposed to remediate contaminated sites. It is well established that multiheme c-type cytochromes (MHCs) are key mediators of electron transfer to aqueous phase U(VI) complexes for bacteria such as Shewanella oneidensis MR-1. Recent studies have confirmed that the reduction proceeds via a first electron transfer forming pentavalent U(V) species that readily disproportionate. However, in the presence of the stabilizing aminocarboxylate ligand, dpaea2- (dpaeaH2═bis(pyridyl-6-methyl-2-carboxylate)-ethylamine), biologically produced U(V) persisted in aqueous solution at pH 7. We aim to pinpoint the role of MHC in the reduction of U(V)-dpaea and to establish the mechanism of solid-phase U(VI)-dpaea reduction. To that end, we investigated U-dpaea reduction by two deletion mutants of S. oneidensis MR-1-one lacking outer membrane MHCs and the other lacking all outer membrane MHCs and a transmembrane MHC-and by the purified outer membrane MHC, MtrC. Our results suggest that solid-phase U(VI)-dpaea is reduced primarily by outer membrane MHCs. Additionally, MtrC can directly transfer electrons to U(V)-dpaea to form U(IV) species but is not strictly necessary, underscoring the primary involvement of outer membrane MHCs in the reduction of this pentavalent U species but not excluding that of periplasmic MHCs.


Asunto(s)
Citocromos , Shewanella , Oxidación-Reducción , Transporte de Electrón , Shewanella/química
13.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(23): e202304051, 2023 Jun 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37015011

RESUMEN

Herein, we report the redox reactivity of a multimetallic uranium complex supported by triphenylsiloxide (-OSiPh3 ) ligands, where we show that low valent synthons can be stabilized via an unprecedented mechanism involving intramolecular ligand migration. The two- and three-electron reduction of the oxo-bridged diuranium(IV) complex [{(Ph3 SiO)3 (DME)U}2 (µ-O)], 4, yields the formal "UII /UIV ", 5, and "UI /UIV ", 6, complexes via ligand migration and formation of uranium-arene δ-bond interactions. Remarkably, complex 5 effects the two-electron reductive coupling of pyridine affording complex 7, which demonstrates that the electron-transfer is accompanied by ligand migration, restoring the original ligand arrangement found in 4. This work provides a new method for controlling the redox reactivity in molecular complexes of unstable, low-valent metal centers, and can lead to the further development of f-elements redox reactivity.

14.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 62(9): e202215846, 2023 Feb 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36576035

RESUMEN

Thorium redox chemistry is extremely scarce due to the high stability of ThIV . Here we report two unique examples of thorium arenide complexes prepared by reduction of a ThIV -siloxide complex in presence of naphthalene, the mononuclear arenide complex [K(OSi(Ot Bu)3 )3 Th(η6 -C10 H8 )] (1) and the inverse-sandwich complex [K(OSi(Ot Bu)3 )3 Th]2 (µ-η6 ,η6 -C10 H8 )] (2). The electrons stored in these complexes allow the reduction of a broad range of substrates (N2 O, AdN3 , CO2 , HBBN). Higher reactivity was found for the complex 1 which reacts with the diazoolefin IDipp=CN2 to yield the unexpected ThIV amidoalkynyl complex 5 via a terminal N-heterocyclic vinylidene intermediate. This work showed that arenides can act as convenient redox-active ligands for implementing thorium-ligand cooperative multielectron transfer and that the reactivity can be tuned by the arenide binding mode.

15.
Chem Sci ; 13(37): 11038-11047, 2022 Sep 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36320468

RESUMEN

The stabilization of uranyl(v) (UO2 1 + ) by Fe(ii) in natural systems remains an open question in uranium chemistry. Stabilization of UVO2 1+ by Fe(ii) against disproportionation was also demonstrated in molecular complexes. However, the relation between the Fe(ii) induced stability and the change of the bonding properties have not been elucidated up to date. We demonstrate that U(v) - oaxial bond covalency decreases upon binding to Fe(ii) inducing redirection of electron density from the U(v) - oaxial bond towards the U(v) - equatorial bonds thereby increasing bond covalency. Our results indicate that such increased covalent interaction of U(v) with the equatorial ligands resulting from iron binding lead to higher stability of uranyl(v). For the first time a combination of U M4,5 high energy resolution X-ray absorption near edge structure (HR-XANES) and valence band resonant inelastic X-ray scattering (VB-RIXS) and ab initio multireference CASSCF and DFT based computations were applied to establish the electronic structure of iron-bound uranyl(v).

16.
Chem Sci ; 13(38): 11294-11303, 2022 Oct 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36320571

RESUMEN

Radical-bridged diuranium complexes are desirable for their potential high exchange coupling and single molecule magnet (SMM) behavior, but remain rare. Here we report for the first time radical-bridged diuranium(iv) and diuranium(iii) complexes. Reaction of [U{N(SiMe3)2}3] with 2,2'-bipyrimidine (bpym) resulted in the formation of the bpym-bridged diuranium(iv) complex [{((Me3Si)2N)3UIV}2(µ-bpym2-)], 1. Reduction with 1 equiv. KC8 reduces the complex, affording [K(2.2.2-cryptand)][{((Me3Si)2N)3U}2(µ-bpym)], 2, which is best described as a radical-bridged UIII-bpym˙--UIII complex. Further reduction of 1 with 2 equiv. KC8, affords [K(2.2.2-cryptand)]2[{((Me3Si)2N)3UIII}2(µ-bpym2-)], 3. Addition of AgBPh4 to complex 1 resulted in the oxidation of the ligand, yielding the radical-bridged complex [{((Me3Si)2N)3UIV}2(µ-bpym˙-)][BPh4], 4. X-ray crystallography, electrochemistry, susceptibility data, EPR and DFT/CASSCF calculations are in line with their assignments. In complexes 2 and 4 the presence of the radical-bridge leads to slow magnetic relaxation.

17.
Chem Sci ; 13(32): 9232-9242, 2022 Aug 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36093011

RESUMEN

The role of alkali promoters in N2 cleavage by metal complexes remains poorly understood despite its relevance to the industrial production of ammonia from N2. Here we report a series of alkali bound-oxo-bridged diuranium(iii) complexes that provide a unique example of decreasing N2 binding affinity with increasing cation size (from K to Cs). N2 binding was found to be irreversible in the presence of K. A N2 complex could be isolated in the solid state in the presence of the Rb cation and crystallographically characterized, but N2 binding was found to be reversible under vacuum. In the presence of the Cs cation N2 binding could not be detected at 1 atm. Electrochemical and Computational studies suggest that the decrease in N2 binding affinity is due to steric rather than electronic effects. We also find that weak N2 binding in ambient conditions does not prevent alkali assisted N2 cleavage to nitride from occurring. More importantly, we present the first example of cesium assisted N2 cleavage leading to the isolation of a N2 derived multimetallic U/Cs bis-nitride. The nitrides readily react with protons and CO to yield ammonia, cyanate and cyanide.

18.
Chem Sci ; 13(27): 8025-8035, 2022 Jul 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35919442

RESUMEN

Multimetallic-multielectron cooperativity plays a key role in the metal-mediated cleavage of N2 to nitrides (N3-). In particular, low-valent uranium complexes coupled with strong alkali metal reducing agents can lead to N2 cleavage, but often, it is ambiguous how many electrons are transferred from the uranium centers to cleave N2. Herein, we designed new dinuclear uranium nitride complexes presenting a combination of electronically diverse ancillary ligands to promote the multielectron transformation of N2. Two heteroleptic diuranium nitride complexes, [K{UIV(OSi(O t Bu)3)(N(SiMe3)2)2}2(µ-N)] (1) and [Cs{UIV(OSi(O t Bu)3)2(N(SiMe3)2)}2(µ-N)] (3-Cs), containing different combinations of OSi(O t Bu)3 and N(SiMe3)2 ancillary ligands, were synthesized. We found that both complexes could be reduced to their U(iii)/U(iv) analogues, and the complex, [K2{UIV/III(OSi(O t Bu)3)2(N(SiMe3)2)}2(µ-N)] (6-K), could be further reduced to a putative U(iii)/U(iii) species that is capable of promoting the 4e- reduction of N2, yielding the N2 4-complex [K3{UV(OSi(O t Bu)3)2(N(SiMe3)2)}2(µ-N)(µ-η2:η2-N2)], 7. Parallel N2 reduction pathways were also identified, leading to the isolation of N2 cleavage products, [K3{UVI(OSi(O t Bu)3)2(N(SiMe3)2)([triple bond, length as m-dash]N)}(µ-N)2{UV(OSi(O t Bu)3)2(N(SiMe3)2)}]2, 8, and [K4{(OSi(O t Bu)3)2UV)([triple bond, length as m-dash]N)}(µ-NH)(µ-κ2:C,N-CH2SiMe2NSiMe3)-{UV(OSi(O t Bu)3)2][K(N(SiMe3)2]2, 9. These complexes provide the first example of N2 cleavage to nitride by a uranium complex in the absence of reducing alkali metals.

19.
J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces ; 126(27): 11310-11317, 2022 Jul 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35865791

RESUMEN

Nuclear magnetic resonance suffers from an intrinsically low sensitivity, which can be overcome by dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP). Gd(III) complexes are attractive exogenous polarizing agents for magic angle spinning (MAS) DNP due to their high chemical stability in contrast to nitroxide-based radicals. However, even the state-of-the-art Gd(III) complexes have so far provided relatively low DNP signal enhancements of ca. 36 in comparison to standard DNP biradicals, which show enhancements of over 200. Here, we report a series of new Gd(III) complexes for DNP and show that the observed DNP enhancements of the new and existing Gd(III) complexes are inversely proportional to the square of the zero-field splitting (ZFS) parameter D, which is in turn determined by the ligand-type and the local coordination environment. The experimental DNP enhancements at 9.4 T and the ZFS parameters measured with pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy agree with the above model, paving the way for the development of more efficient Gd(III) polarizing agents.

20.
Inorg Chem ; 61(19): 7436-7447, 2022 May 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35505299

RESUMEN

Trinuclear molecular complexes of europium (II) and ytterbium(II) [Ln3{(Ph2SiO)2O}3(THF)6], 1-Ln3L3 (Ln = Eu and Yb), supported by the dianionic tetraphenyl disiloxanediolate ligand, were synthesized via protonolysis of the [Ln{N(SiMe3)2}2(THF)2] complexes. In contrast, the reaction of [Sm{N(SiMe3)2}2(THF)2] with the (Ph2SiOH)2O ligand led to the isolation of the mixed-valent Sm(II)/Sm(III) complex [Sm3{(Ph2SiO)2O}3{N(SiMe3)2}(THF)4], 2-Sm3L3, which was crystallographically characterized. The Eu(II) complex 1-Eu3L3 displays weak ferromagnetic coupling between the Eu(II) metal centers (J = 0.1035 cm-1). The addition of 3 equiv of (Ph2SiOK)2O to 1-Eu3L3 resulted in the formation of the polynuclear Eu(II) dimer of dimers [K4Eu2{(Ph2SiO)2O}4(Et2O)2]2, 3-Eu2L4. Complexes 1-Ln3L3 (Ln = Eu and Yb) are stable in solution at room temperature, while 3-Eu2L4 shows higher reactivity and rapidly decomposes to give the mixed-valent Eu(II)/Eu(III) species [K3Eu2{(Ph2SiO)2O}4], 4-Eu2L4. Complex 1-Yb3L3 affects the slow reductive disproportionation of carbon dioxide, but 1-Eu3L3 does not display any reactivity toward CO2. However, the presence of one additional (Ph2SiO-)2O per Eu(II) metal center in 3-Eu2L4 increases dramatically the reductive ability of the Eu(II) metal centers, affording the first example of carbon dioxide activation by an isolated divalent europium complex. The reduction of CO2 by 3-Eu2L4 is immediate, and carbonate is formed selectively after the addition of a stoichiometric amount of CO2.

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