Issue 9, 2005

Solvation of fluoro and mixed fluoro/chloro complexes of EuIII in the [BMI][PF6] room temperature ionic liquid. A theoretical study

Abstract

We report a molecular dynamics study on the solvation of EuFn(3−n) complexes in the [BMI][PF6] ionic liquid, composed of 1-butyl-3-methyl-imidazolium+ cations and PF6 anions. It is found that the most fluorinated complex in the liquid should be the EuF63− species. In solution the EuF107− and EuF74− complexes indeed loose, respectively, 4 and 1 F anion to form the EuF63− complex, while the first solvation shell of the less fluorinated complexes (n = 1 to 5) is completed with 5 to 1 PF6 anions to form an octahedral first shell around Eu3+. There is one case (simulations with a “small” F model) where the EuF74− complex remains stable, and cannot therefore be fully precluded. The anionic complexes are embedded in a cage formed by 6–9 BMI+ cations at ca. 8 Å, hydrogen-bonded by imidazolium–CH⋯F interactions. Simulations on the mixed EuFnCl6−n3− complexes in solution and in gas phase also reveal the highest stability of EuF63− compared to the mixed or the EuCl63− complexes. This is confirmed by free energy perturbation calculations and results from the stronger coordination of F, compared to Cl ligands, as well as from better solvation of the fluoro complexes by the ionic liquid. In the gas phase, however, QM and MM calculations indicate that EuF63− is unstable towards the dissociation of 1 to 2 F ions, which points to the importance of environment and solvation forces on the stability of this octahedrally coordinated lanthanide complex.

Graphical abstract: Solvation of fluoro and mixed fluoro/chloro complexes of EuIII in the [BMI][PF6] room temperature ionic liquid. A theoretical study

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
19 Nov 2004
Accepted
10 Mar 2005
First published
29 Mar 2005

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2005,7, 1926-1932

Solvation of fluoro and mixed fluoro/chloro complexes of EuIII in the [BMI][PF6] room temperature ionic liquid. A theoretical study

A. Chaumont and G. Wipff, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2005, 7, 1926 DOI: 10.1039/B417598K

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