4.7 Article

Uranyl Peroxide Oxalate Cage and Core-Shell Clusters Containing 50 and 120 Uranyl Ions

Journal

INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 51, Issue 4, Pages 2403-2408

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ic202380g

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Materials Science of Actinides Center, an Energy Frontier Research Center
  2. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-SC0001089]

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Cage clusters built from uranyl hexagonal bipyramids and oxalate ligands crystallize from slightly acidic aqueous solution under ambient conditions, facilitating structure analysis. Each cluster contains uranyl ions coordinated by peroxo ligands in a bidentate configuration. Uranyl ions are bridged by shared peroxo ligands, oxalate ligands, or through hydroxyl groups. U(50)Ox(20) contains 50 uranyl ions and 20 oxalate groups and is a topological derivative of the U-50 cage cluster that has a fullerene topology. U(120)Ox(90) contains 120 uranyl ions and 90 oxalate groups and is the largest and highest mass cluster containing uranyl ions that has been reported. It has a core shell structure, in which the inner shell (core) consists of a cluster of 60 uranyl ions and 30 oxalate groups, identical to U(60)Ox(30), with a fullerene topology. The outer shell contains 12 identical units that each consist of five uranyl hexagonal bipyramids that are linked to form a ring (topological pentagon), with each uranyl ion also coordinated by a side-on nonbridging oxalate group. The five-membered rings of the inner and outer shells (the topological pentagons) are in correspondence and are linked through K cations. The inner shell topology has therefore templated the location of the outer shell rings, and the K counterions assume a structure-directing role. Small-angle X-ray scattering data demonstrated U(50)Ox(20) remains intact in aqueous solution upon dissolution. In the case of clusters of U(120)Ox(90), the scattering data for dissolved crystals indicates the U(60)Ox(30) core persists in solution, although the outer rings of uranyl bipyramids contained in the U(120)Ox(90) core-shell cluster appear to detach from the cluster when crystals are dissolved in water.

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