Actinide
metal oxo clusters are of vital importance in actinide
chemistry, as well as in environmental and materials sciences. They
are ubiquitous in both aqueous and nonaqueous phases and play key
roles in nuclear materials (e.g., nuclear fuel) and nuclear waste
management. Despite their importance, our structural understanding
of the actinide metal oxo clusters, particularly the transuranic ones,
is very limited because of experimental challenges such as high radioactivity.
Herein we report a systematic theoretical study on the structures
and stabilities of seven actinide metal oxo–hydroxo clusters
[AnIV6O4(OH)4L12] (1-An; An = Th–Cm; L = O2CH–) along with their group 4 (Ti, Zr, Hf, Rf) and lanthanide
(Ce) counterparts [MIV6O4(OH)4L12] (1-M). The work shows the Td-symmetric structures of all
of the 1-An/M clusters and suggests the positions of
the −OH functional groups, which are experimentally challenging
to determine. Furthermore, by removing six electrons from 1-An, we found that oxidation could happen on the AnIV metal
ions, producing [AnV6O4(OH)4L12]6+ (2-An; An = Pa, U, Np),
or on the O2– and OH– ligands,
producing [AnIV6(O•–)4(OH•)2(OH)2L12]6+ (3-An; An = Pu, Am, Cm). On the
basis of 2-An, we constructed a series of tetravalent
and pentavalent actinide metal oxo clusters [AnIV6O14]4– (4-An) and [AnV6O14]2+ (5-An),
which proves the feasibility of the highly important pentavalent actinyl
clusters, demonstrates the f orbital’s structure-directing
role in the formation of linear [OAnVO]+ actinyl ions, and expands the concept of actinyl–actinyl
interaction into pentavalent transuranic actinyl clusters.