Emergence of Comparable Covalency in Isostructural Cerium(IV)- and Uranium(IV)-Carbon Multiple Bonds

Matthew Gregson, Erli Lu, Stephen Liddle, Floriana Tuna, Eric J L Mcinnes, Christoph Hennig, Andreas C Scheinost, Jonathan McMaster, William Lewis, Alexander J Blake, Andrew Kerridge

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    159 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    We report comparable levels of covalency in cerium- and uranium-carbon multiple bonds in the iso-structural carbene complexes [M(BIPMTMS)(ODipp)2] [M = Ce (1), U (2), Th (3); BIPMTMS = C(PPh2NSiMe3)2; Dipp = C6H3-2,6-Pri2] whereas for M = Th the M=C bond interaction is much more ionic. On the basis of single crystal X-ray diffraction, NMR, IR, EPR, and XANES spectroscopies, and SQUID magnetometry complexes 1-3 are confirmed formally as bona fide metal(IV) complexes. In order to avoid the deficiencies of orbital-based theoretical analysis approaches we probed the bonding of 1-3 via analysis of RASSCF- and CASSCF-derived densities that explicitly treats the orbital energy near-degeneracy and overlap contributions to covalency. For these complexes similar levels of covalency are found for cerium(IV) and uranium(IV), whereas thorium(IV) is found to be more ionic, and this trend is independently found in all computational methods employed. The computationally determined trends in covalency of these systems of Ce ~ U > Th are also reproduced in experimental exchange reactions of 1-3 with MCl4 salts where 1 and 2 do not exchange with ThCl4, but 3 does exchange with MCl4 (M = Ce, U) and 1 and 2 react with UCl4 and CeCl4, respectively, to establish equilibria. This study therefore provides complementary theoretical and experimental evidence that contrasts to the accepted description that generally lanthanide-ligand bonding in non-zero oxidation state complexes is overwhelmingly ionic but that of uranium is more covalent.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)3286
    Number of pages3297
    JournalChemical Science
    Volume7
    Issue number5
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 4 Feb 2016

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Emergence of Comparable Covalency in Isostructural Cerium(IV)- and Uranium(IV)-Carbon Multiple Bonds'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this