Inverse Trans Influence in Low-Valence Actinide–Group
10 Metal Complexes of Phosphinoaryl Oxides: A Theoretical Study via
Tuning Metals and Donor Ligands
posted on 2019-07-12, 11:35authored byRaza ullah
shah Bacha, Yan-Ting Bi, Li-Chun Xuan, Qing-Jiang Pan
The recognition and
in-depth understanding of inverse trans influence
(ITI) have successfully guided the synthesis of novel actinide complexes
and enriched actinide chemistry. Those complexes, however, are mainly
limited to the involvement of high-valence actinide and/or metal–ligand
multiple bonds. Examples containing both low oxidation state actinide
and metal–metal single bond remain rare. Herein, more than
20 actinide-transition metal (An-TM) complexes of phosphinoaryl oxide
ligands have been designed in accordance with several experimentally
known analogs, by changing the metal atoms (An = Th, Pa, U, Np, and
Pu; and TM = Ni, Pd, and Pt), actinide oxidation states (IV and III)
and metal–metal axial donor ligands (X = Me3SiO,
F, Cl, Br, and I). The relativistic density functional theory study
of structural (trans-An–X and cis-An–O toward An–TM), bonding (topological electron/energy
density), and electronic properties reveals the order of the ITI stabilizing
actinide–metal bond. Computed electron affinity (EA) values,
related to the electrochemical reduction, linearly correlate with
experimentally measured reduction potentials. Although the same ITI
order for the ligand donors was shown as in a previous study, the
correlation between electrochemical reduction and the ITI was found
to be weak when the actinide atoms were changed. For most complexes,
the reduction is primarily of an actinide-based mechanism with minor
participation of transition metal and phosphinoaryl oxide, whereas
that of thorium–nickel complexes is different.