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From +I to +IV, Alkalis to Actinides: Capturing Cations across the Periodic Table with Keggin Polyoxometalate Ligands.

Ian ColliardGauthier J P Deblonde
Published in: Inorganic chemistry (2024)
Coordination chemistry trends across the periodic table are often difficult to probe experimentally due to limitations in finding a versatile but consistent chelating platform that can accommodate various elements without changing its coordination mode. Herein, we present new metal/ligand systems covering a wide range of ionic radii, charges, and elements. Five different ligands derived from the Keggin structure (HBW 11 O 39 8- , PW 11 O 39 7- , SiW 11 O 39 8- , GeW 11 O 39 8- , and GaW 11 O 39 9- ) were successfully crystallized with six different cations (Na + , Sr 2+ , Ba 2+ , La 3+ , Ce 4+ , and Th 4+ ) and characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Twenty-five new compounds were obtained by using Cs + as the counterion, yielding a consistent base formula of Cs x [M(XW 11 O 39 ) 2 ]· n H 2 O. Despite having a similar first-coordination sphere geometry (i.e., 8-coordinated), the nature of the central cation was found to impact the long-range geometry of the complexes. This unique crystallographic data set shows that, despite the traditional consensus, the local geometry of the cation (i.e., metal-oxygen bond distance) is not enough to depict the full impact of the complexed metal ion. The bending and twisting of the complexes, as well as ligand-ligand distances, were all impacted by the nature of the central cation. We also observed that counterions play a critical role by stabilizing the geometry of the M(XW 11 ) 2 complex and directing complex-complex interactions in the lattice. We also define certain structural limits for this type of complex, with the large Ba 2+ ion seemingly approaching those limits. This study thus lays the foundation for capturing the coordination chemistry of other rarer elements across the periodic table such as Ra 2+ , Ac 3+ , Bk 4+ , Cf 3+ , etc.
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