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Porous Uranium Diphosphonate Frameworks with Trinuclear Units Templated by Organic Ammonium Hydrolyzed from Amine Solvents.

Zhi-Hui ZhangGanna A SenchykYi LiuTyler L SpanoJennifer E S SzymanowskiPeter C Burns
Published in: Inorganic chemistry (2018)
By varying solvent systems, the solvothermal treatment of uranyl nitrate and methylenediphosphonic acid (H4PCP) afforded three new porous uranyl-organic frameworks (UOFs). All were structurally characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction and formulated as (Et2NH2)2[(UO2)3(PCP)2](H2O)2.5 (1), (MeNH3)(H3O)[(UO2)3(PCP)2(H2O)3] (2), and [Na(H2O)4](H3O)[(UO2)3(PCP)2(H2O)2](H2O)5 (3). These compounds crystallize with three-dimensional anionic frameworks containing U(VI) and distinct cationic species due to in situ solvent hydrolysis. The solvent systems diethylformamide (DEF), N-methyl-2-pyrrolindone (NMP), and the additive sodium vanadate (Na3VO4) significantly impact the resultant structures, affording diethyl ammonium, methyl ammonium, and sodium cations captured in channels of the anionic frameworks of 1-3. In 1, a trinuclear U3O18 unit formed by three uranyl polyhedra that share edges is connected into a three-dimensional framework. Compound 2 has a three-dimensional framework formed from a uranyl-methylenediphosphonate layer that is pillared by UO7 pentagonal bipyramids. With the inclusion of sodium cations, 3 is a porous framework containing UO7 pentagonal bipyramids within a layer, with sodium cations and UO6 square bipyramids linking the adjacent layers. Compounds 1-3 feature the uranyl/ligand ratio of 3:2, but present diverse structural building units ranging from edge-shared trinuclear to heteronuclear assemblies. The compounds have been characterized by infrared (IR), Raman, and UV-vis spectroscopies, X-ray diffraction, and thermogravimetric analysis.
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