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Are U-U Bonds Inside Fullerenes Really Unwilling Bonds?

Antonio Moreno-VicenteYannick RosellóNing ChenLuis A EchegoyenPaul W DunkAntonio Rodriguez-ForteaCoen de GraafJosep-Maria Poblet
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Previous characterizations of diactinide endohedral metallofullerenes (EMFs) Th 2 @C 80 and U 2 @C 80 have shown that although the two Th 3+ ions form a strong covalent bond within the carbon cage, the interaction between the U 3+ ions is weaker and described as an "unwilling" bond. To evaluate the feasibility of covalent U-U bonds, which are neglected in classical actinide chemistry, we have first investigated the formation of smaller diuranium EMFs by laser ablation using mass spectrometric detection of dimetallic U 2 @C 2n species with 2 n ≥ 50. DFT, CASPT2 calculations, and MD simulations for several fullerenes of different sizes and symmetries showed that thanks to the formation of strong U(5f 3 )-U(5f 3 ) triple bonds, two U 3+ ions can be incarcerated inside the fullerene. The formation of U-U bonds competes with U-cage interactions that tend to separate the U ions, hindering the observation of short U-U distances in the crystalline structures of diuranium endofullerenes as in U 2 @C 80 . Smaller cages like C 60 exhibit the two interactions, and a strong triple U-U bond with an effective bond order higher than 2 is observed. Although 5f-5f interactions are responsible for the covalent interactions at distances close to 2.5 Å, overlap between 7s6d orbitals is still detected above 4 Å. In general, metal ions within fullerenes should be regarded as templates in cage formation, not as statistically confined units that have little chance of being observed.
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