C&CB Department Seminar: Dr. William J. Evans, Department of Chemistry, University of California, Irvine, California
Jan 13, 2022
1:30PM to 2:30PM
Date/Time
Date(s) - 13/01/2022
1:30 pm - 2:30 pm
Title: Expanding the Range of Oxidation States inMolecular Complexes of the Rare-Earth and Actinide Metals
Date: Thursday, January 13, 2022
Time: 1:30-2:30 pm
Zoom link available from chemgrad@mcmaster.ca
Host: Nick Hoffman
Abstract: The discovery that crystallographically-characterizable molecularcomplexes of the rare-earth metals (Sc, Y, lanthanides) in the formal +2oxidation state were isolable for metals beyond Eu, Yb, Sm, Tm, Dy, and Nd intris(silyl-cyclopentadienyl) complexes such as (Cp’3Ln)1?and (Cp”3Ln)1?, where Cp’ = C5H4SiMe3and Cp” = C5H3(SiMe3)2, has initiatedan extensive search for other ligand systems and coordination environments thatwill stabilize low oxidation state ions. This effort has been stimulatedby the structural, spectroscopic, and magnetic results that indicate thatreduction of precursors containing 4fn lanthanide +3 ions can form4fn5d1 lanthanide +2 ions rather than the traditional 4fn+1products. These discoveries have also led to An(II) complexes (An =actinide metal) with 5fn6d1 and 6d2 electronconfigurations. The initial synthetic studies suggested that a trigonaltris(silyl-cyclopentadienyl) coordination environment was crucial for isolatingthe new oxidation states, but results with a variety of ligands includingamides, aryloxides, and polyalkylcyclopentadienyl ligands indicate that theseoxidation states are more generally accessible. The diversity of ligandsystems that support +2 oxidation states for the rare-earth and actinide metalswill be presented and an evaluation of the factors that allow access to theseoxidation states will be described. This appears to involve a variety ofsubtle factors including speed of crystallization. Some unusual physicalproperties of these new complexes will also be discussed.