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Polyoxometalates as ligands to synthesize, isolate and characterize compounds of rare isotopes on the microgram scale.

Ian ColliardJonathan R I LeeChristopher A CollaHarris E MasonApril M SawvelMavrik ZavarinMay NymanGauthier J P Deblonde
Published in: Nature chemistry (2022)
The synthesis and study of radioactive compounds are both inherently limited by their toxicity, cost and isotope scarcity. Traditional methods using small inorganic or organic complexes typically require milligrams of sample-per attempt-which for some isotopes is equivalent to the world's annual supply. Here we demonstrate that polyoxometalates (POMs) enable the facile formation, crystallization, handling and detailed characterization of metal-ligand complexes from microgram quantities owing to their high molecular weight and controllable solubility properties. Three curium-POM complexes were prepared, using just 1-10 μg per synthesis of the rare isotope 248 Cm 3+ , and characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, showing an eight-coordinated Cm 3+ centre. Moreover, spectrophotometric, fluorescence, NMR and Raman analyses of several f-block element-POM complexes, including 243 Am 3+ and 248 Cm 3+ , showed otherwise unnoticeable differences between their solution versus solid-state chemistry, and actinide versus lanthanide behaviour. This POM-driven strategy represents a viable path to isolate even rarer complexes, notably with actinium or transcalifornium elements.
Keyphrases
  • solid state
  • high resolution
  • single molecule
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • mass spectrometry
  • gold nanoparticles
  • metal organic framework
  • gas chromatography
  • computed tomography
  • drug discovery
  • energy transfer