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A diuranium carbide cluster stabilized inside a C80 fullerene cage.

Xingxing ZhangWanlu LiLai FengXin ChenAndreas HansenStefan GrimmeSkye FortierDumitru-Claudiu SergentuThomas J DuignanJochen AutschbachShuao WangYaofeng WangGiorgios VelkosAlexey A PopovNabi AghdassiSteffen DuhmXiaohong LiJun LiLuis EchegoyenW H Eugen SchwarzNing Chen
Published in: Nature communications (2018)
Unsupported non-bridged uranium-carbon double bonds have long been sought after in actinide chemistry as fundamental synthetic targets in the study of actinide-ligand multiple bonding. Here we report that, utilizing Ih(7)-C80 fullerenes as nanocontainers, a diuranium carbide cluster, U=C=U, has been encapsulated and stabilized in the form of UCU@Ih(7)-C80. This endohedral fullerene was prepared utilizing the Krätschmer-Huffman arc discharge method, and was then co-crystallized with nickel(II) octaethylporphyrin (NiII-OEP) to produce UCU@Ih(7)-C80·[NiII-OEP] as single crystals. X-ray diffraction analysis reveals a cage-stabilized, carbide-bridged, bent UCU cluster with unexpectedly short uranium-carbon distances (2.03 Å) indicative of covalent U=C double-bond character. The quantum-chemical results suggest that both U atoms in the UCU unit have formal oxidation state of +5. The structural features of UCU@Ih(7)-C80 and the covalent nature of the U(f1)=C double bonds were further affirmed through various spectroscopic and theoretical analyses.
Keyphrases
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