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Covalent bond shortening and distortion induced by pressurization of thorium, uranium, and neptunium tetrakis aryloxides.

Jacob J ShephardVictoria E J BerrymanTatsumi OchiaiOlaf WalterAmy N PriceMark R WarrenPolly L ArnoldNikolas KaltsoyannisSimon Parsons
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
Covalency involving the 5f orbitals is regularly invoked to explain the reactivity, structure and spectroscopic properties of the actinides, but the ionic versus covalent nature of metal-ligand bonding in actinide complexes remains controversial. The tetrakis 2,6-di-tert-butylphenoxide complexes of Th, U and Np form an isostructural series of crystal structures containing approximately tetrahedral MO 4 cores. We show that up to 3 GPa the Th and U crystal structures show negative linear compressibility as the OMO angles distort. At 3 GPa the angles snap back to their original values, reverting to a tetrahedral geometry with an abrupt shortening of the M-O distances by up to 0.1 Å. The Np complex shows similar but smaller effects, transforming above 2.4 GPa. Electronic structure calculations associate the M-O bond shortening with a change in covalency resulting from increased contributions to the M-O bonding by the metal 6d and 5f orbitals, the combination promoting MO 4 flexibility at little cost in energy.
Keyphrases
  • density functional theory
  • molecular dynamics
  • molecular docking
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • escherichia coli