A New Molybdenum Blue Structure Type: How Uranium Expands This Family of Polyoxometalates

Chemistry. 2024 Feb 27:e202400678. doi: 10.1002/chem.202400678. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTThe assembly of molybdenum polyoxometalates (POMs) has afforded large discrete nanoclusters with varied degrees of reduction such as the ~20% reduced molybdenum blues. While many heterometals have been incorporated into these clusters to afford new properties, uranium has yet to be reported. Here we report the first uranium containing molybdenum blue clusters and the unique properties exhibited by this incorporation. The uranyl ion (UO22+) directs formation of Mo72U8, a square POM comprised of two faces connected by eight edge-sharing molybdenum dimers. Mo72U8, a chiral cluster, crystallizes as a racemic mixture and, in the solid state, has a 'negative' charge localized on one face of the cluster opposite the 'positively' charged face of another cluster. Using U(IV) as both heterometal and molybdenum reductant afforded crystals of Mo97U10, a wheel cluster with a heptamolybdate cap on one face. Mo97U10 dissociates in solution, losing the heptamolybdate, to form Mo90U10. Using more solvent during synthesis afforded crystals of Mo90U10S4 which, instead of heptamolybdate, contains four sulfate ions. Crystals of Mo90U10S4 undergo a dehydration induced phase change where clusters form a sheet through oxide bridges. Half of the bridges are cation-cation interactions between the uranyl oxygen atom and molybdenum, the first reported of this kind.PMID:38412002 | DOI:10.1002/chem.202400678
Source: Chemistry - Category: Chemistry Authors: Source Type: research