Open Access Article
James R. Pankhursta,
Nicola L. Bella,
Markus Zegkea,
Lucy N. Plattsa,
Carlos Alvarez Lamfsusb,
Laurent Maronb,
Louise S. Natrajanc,
Stephen Sproulesd,
Polly L. Arnold
*a and
Jason B. Love
*a
aEaStCHEM School of Chemistry, The University of Edinburgh, Joseph Black Building, David Brewster Road, Edinburgh, EH9 3FJ, UK. E-mail: jason.love@ed.ac.uk; polly.arnold@ed.ac.uk
bLPCNO, INSA, Université de Toulouse, 135, avenue de Rangueil, 31077 Toulouse cedex 4, France
cCentre for Radiochemisty Research, School of Chemistry, The University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK
dWestCHEM School of Chemistry, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, G12 8QQ, UK
First published on 28th October 2016
The uranyl(VI) complex UO2Cl(L) of the redox-active, acyclic diimino-dipyrrin anion, L− is reported and its reaction with inner- and outer-sphere reductants studied. Voltammetric, EPR-spectroscopic and X-ray crystallographic studies show that chemical reduction by the outer-sphere reagent CoCp2 initially reduces the ligand to a dipyrrin radical, and imply that a second equivalent of CoCp2 reduces the U(VI) centre to form U(V). Cyclic voltammetry indicates that further outer-sphere reduction to form the putative U(IV) trianion only occurs at strongly cathodic potentials. The initial reduction of the dipyrrin ligand is supported by emission spectra, X-ray crystallography, and DFT; the latter also shows that these outer-sphere reactions are exergonic and proceed through sequential, one-electron steps. Reduction by the inner-sphere reductant [TiCp2Cl]2 is also likely to result in ligand reduction in the first instance but, in contrast to the outer-sphere case, reduction of the uranium centre becomes much more favoured, allowing the formation of a crystallographically characterised, doubly-titanated U(IV) complex. In the case of inner-sphere reduction only, ligand-to-metal electron-transfer is thermodynamically driven by coordination of Lewis-acidic Ti(IV) to the uranyl oxo, and is energetically preferable over the disproportionation of U(V). Overall, the involvement of the redox-active dipyrrin ligand in the reduction chemistry of UO2Cl(L) is inherent to both inner- and outer-sphere reduction mechanisms, providing a new route to accessing a variety of U(VI), U(V), and U(IV) complexes.
Molecular systems that favour an overall two-electron reduction of U(VI) to U(IV) are particularly sought after as U(IV) salts are generally less soluble than U(VI) and may provide a deeper understanding of uranium (bio)remediation. The reduction of uranyl(VI) β-ketoiminate complexes to U(IV) is facilitated by oxo-coordination of boron Lewis acids,30 and reductive silylation of a uranyl(VI) β-diketonate leads to the isolation of a U(IV) triflate through O-abstraction.35 Two-electron reduction of uranyl(VI) is thought to occur on photolysis of a phosphine oxide complex in the presence of alcohols, forming U(IV) alkoxide complexes,36,37 and comproportionation of U(VI) and U(III) triflates has been shown to form U(IV) polyoxo clusters.38 Additionally, the reaction of simple Lewis bases with functionalised U(V) iodo complexes has led to further reduction to U(IV) on elimination of I2.23 Furthermore, bacterial species such as Geobacter sulfurreducens have demonstrated biotic reduction of [UO2]2+ to UO2 (uraninite);39–41 in comparison the [NpO2]+ congener is not reduced under these conditions.42
We recently reported the straightforward synthesis of the mono-anionic, tetradentate dipyrrin ligand, HL (Scheme 1), and the solid-state structure of a related iron(III) complex {FeBr(L)}2(μ-O) in which the iron centre is five-coordinate with one imine arm pendant.43 As such, we anticipated that L− would occupy four of the five equatorial sites of the larger uranyl dication and that the incorporation of the potentially redox-active, donor-expanded dipyrrin framework would allow access to new, ligand-mediated, uranyl reduction chemistry. Here we report a new donor-expanded dipyrrin uranyl(VI) complex and its contrasting inner- and outer-sphere redox chemistry, both of which routes involve the redox-active dipyrrin.
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1 mixture of UO2{N(SiMe3)2}2(thf)2 and UO2Cl2(thf)2 in toluene yields 2 directly in high yield and purity (Method B). The 1H NMR spectrum of 2 in C6D6 features four resonances for the dipyrrin ligand, with the imine protons seen at 9.52 ppm, equivalent pyrrole protons as doublets at 7.30 ppm and 7.18 ppm and tert-butyl protons as a single resonance at 2.01 ppm. In the batch crystallised from method A three pyridine resonances, most likely from solvent of crystallisation are seen at 8.56, 7.65 and 7.25 ppm, integrating with a 1
:
1 ratio with 2. When 2 is synthesised in the absence of pyridine (Method B) the NMR spectrum of crystalline material shows no solvent inclusion. In the 19F{1H} NMR spectrum, there is a single set of sharp resonances for the C6F5meso-substituent, at −140.68, −155.19 and −163.34 ppm. Noteworthy absorption bands in the IR spectrum of 2 are those ascribed to the imine functional group at 1556 cm−1 and also the asymmetric stretching mode of the uranyl group (ν3) at 878 cm−1. Purple/blue, pleochroic single crystals of 2 grown from a concentrated benzene solution were suitable for structural analysis by X-ray crystallography (Fig. 1). In the solid state, 2 adopts a distorted pentagonal bipyramidal coordination geometry, in which the N4-donor set of the donor-expanded dipyrrin ligand occupies the equatorial positions along with the chloride ligand, with the equatorial bond angles summing to 368.26°. The Cl1 centre is situated 1.647 Å above the mean N4-plane. This distortion from its position in the idealised geometry means that steric interactions between the chloride ligand and the nearby tert-butyl substituents are minimised. These tert-butyl groups bend away from the same face of the N4 donor-plane, meaning that the C2v symmetry observed in solution is not retained in the solid state. At 1.766(4) and 1.763(4) Å, the two U–O bond distances are identical and are typical for a U(VI) uranyl complex, and the O–U–O bond angle is essentially linear at 175.5(2)°.
In the solid-state 3 is clearly a neutral molecule, therefore the uranium and titanium centres are both assigned formal oxidation states of +4. The uranium centre in 3 adopts a more regular pentagonal bipyramidal coordination geometry than that found in 2, with the equatorial bond angles summing to 360.6°. This may be due to the tert-butyl substituents adopting a C2-twist in 3. The U–N bond distances in 3 are all elongated by 0.06 to 0.12 Å compared to those in 2, consistent with reduction of U(VI) to a lower oxidation state. Importantly, the U–O bond lengths (2.066(7)–2.062(7) Å) are elongated significantly compared to those in 2 and are similar to U(IV) siloxy complexes (2.065 Å)23 but longer than U(V) siloxy complexes (1.993 Å).19 Single U–O bonds are on average 2.361 Å (CCD search with 3028 relevant complexes) which suggests that the U–O bonds in 3 retain some multiple-bond character. The Ti1–O1 bond distance of 1.841(7) Å is similar to that found in the Ti(IV) oxo-bridged dimer [TiCp2Cl]2(μ-O) (1.837(2) Å).44
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1
:
1 ratio, with the latter complex precipitating from solution over time. The ratios of complexes in this mixture change slowly over 24 h in solution to generate more of 2 and 3 (the latter as a precipitate), i.e.4 undergoes slow disproportionation. The uranyl(V) complex is identified by its 1H NMR spectrum only, with characteristic resonances between +20 and −10 ppm, in particular the singlet resonances at 19.35 ppm for 10 Cp protons and −8.58 ppm for 18 tBu protons.
For comparison, the CV of HL and the potassium salt, KL, were measured under identical conditions (see ESI†). HL undergoes two irreversible reduction processes at Ecp −1.50 V and −2.07 V vs. Fc+/Fc and KL also undergoes two irreversible reduction processes, at Ecp −1.29 V and −1.57 V.
000 dm3 mol−1 cm−1. The reduced uranium(IV) complex 3 has a near-identical absorption spectrum to 2, albeit with a significantly reduced molar absorptivity (εmax = 11
000 dm3 mol−1 cm−1 at 598 nm). Complex 3 also features a number of weak absorption bands in the near-infra-red (NIR) region with extinction coefficients less than 50 dm3 mol−1 cm−1 (Fig. 5). This pattern is nearly identical to U(IV) pentahalide anions45,46 and supports the +4 oxidation state for complex 3. The higher-energy f–f transitions for the ground-state 3H4 ion are not observed due to the intense absorption of the dipyrrin chromophore in the UV and visible regions.
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| Fig. 4 Room-temperature electronic absorption spectra for HL (green), 2 (blue) and 3 (red), all measured as toluene solutions. | ||
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| Fig. 5 Room temperature NIR absorption spectrum for 3 (toluene solution). Assignments are based on comparison with U(IV) pentahalide anions, which display near-identical NIR spectra.45 | ||
At room temperature, excitation into the dipyrrin absorption bands in HL dissolved in THF at 280, 405, 425 and 550 nm results in fluorescence spectra with emission bands centred at 490 and 600 nm in all cases (Fig. 6).
The fluorescence lifetimes of the emission features for HL were recorded following 405 nm excitation with a picosecond pulsed diode LASER and were measured in the nanosecond regime (see Table S2†).47 All lifetimes fit well to biexponential decay kinetics, with components of ca. 1 and 5 ns. In a frozen glass at 77 K, following excitation at 240, 405 and 550 nm, the resulting emission spectra are essentially identical to those recorded in fluid solution at room temperature. The fluorescence lifetimes at 77 K are similar to those recorded in fluid solution and again are biexponential at ca. 1 and 4 ns for both the emission at 490 and 600 nm.
In the uranium complexes 2 and 3, excitation into the dipyrrin ligand absorption bands at 240, 405 and 425 nm affords spectra that are similar to those of HL (Fig. 6). However, for complex 2, the larger molar absorption coefficient in the band at ca. 593 nm enabled us to spectrally isolate the emission arising from this transition. The recorded emission spectrum is essentially a mirror image of the absorption band with only a marginal Stokes shift (ca. 8 nm). Room temperature time-resolved measurements enabled the luminescence lifetimes of all the emission bands in 2 and 3 to be measured upon excitation at 405 nm, and these are found to be biexponential and comparable to those measured for HL in fluid solution (see Table S2†). Unfortunately, accurate lifetime data were not obtained for complexes 2 and 3 at 77 K due to the comparatively weaker emission intensities compared to HL in frozen THF in optically dilute samples.
The in situ reduction of 2 by one and two equivalents of CoCp2 in toluene was carried out and analysed by UV-vis-NIR spectrophotometry. Reaction of 2 with one equivalent of CoCp2 caused a significant hypsochromic (blue) shift in the band at 557 nm (ε = 43
000 dm3 mol−1 cm−1) in 2 to 548 nm (27
000) in 2−. Addition of a second equivalent of CoCp2 forming 22− caused a further hypsochromic shift to 539 nm (26
000). A significant decrease in the extinction coefficient of these features occur on reduction of 2 to 2−. While attempts to isolate and crystallise 22− were unsuccessful, a small quantity of crystals were isolated from the reaction between 2 and 2 CoCp2 and proved to be the singly reduced species 2− (Fig. 7). The UV-vis spectrum of this crystalline material is identical to that resulting from the in situ reaction between 2 and one equivalent of CoCp2 and is very different to the spectra for 2 and 22− (see ESI†).
Since the LUMO of complex 2 is located solely on the ligand, a ligand-based reduction was first investigated computationally by optimising the geometry of the proposed (L˙)–U(VI)–Ti(IV) intermediate. The nature of the oxidation state of the uranium centre was fixed at +6 using f-in-core Relativistic Effective Core Potentials (RECP). Such an intermediate was computed to be stable and its formation is exergonic by 5.7 kcal mol−1 with respect to the separated reactants (2 + TiCp2Cl). Relaxing the oxidation state of the uranium centre by performing a small-core calculation, i.e. without imposing the f-configuration, leads to the formation of a more stable (L)–U(V)–Ti(IV) complex that is 4.0 kcal mol−1 lower in energy than the (L˙)–U(VI)–Ti(IV) intermediate. The first reduction is therefore occurring in two steps with first a ligand-based reduction that evolves into a metal-based reduction with the formation of a (L)–U(V)–Ti(IV) complex. For the second reduction and the formation of complex 3, the situation is slightly different as the LUMO of the (L)–U(V)–Ti(IV) intermediate exhibits an overlap between f-orbitals of U and the π*-orbital of the ligand. Therefore, estimating the difference between ligand-based and metal-based reduction is not straightforward computationally. Even so, the second reduction is found to be exergonic by 12.5 kcal mol−1 with respect to (L)–U(V)–Ti(IV). Furthermore, the optimised structure of 3 is in close agreement with that determined crystallographically.
An alternative disproportionation of the (L)–U(V)–Ti(IV) intermediate to generate a 1
:
1 mixture of 2 and 3 was also evaluated and was found to be 11.2 kcal mol−1 higher in energy than sequential reduction by Ti(III). Finally, the plausibility of an outer-sphere reduction mechanism was investigated. The first step would be a ligand-based reduction yielding [(L˙)–U(VI)]−, followed by two metal-based reductions yielding a [(L˙)–U(IV)]3− complex through the formation of a [(L˙)–U(V)]2− compound. The ligand-based reduction with respect to CoCp2 is computed to be favourable by 37.1 kcal mol−1, and the two metal-based reductions are exergonic by 56.4 kcal mol−1 and 57.0 kcal mol−1 respectively.
The presence of the dipyrrin chromophore in HL, 2 and 3 dominates the electronic spectra of these compounds and possible uranium emission,52 and impacts on their redox processes. For 2, the band at 557 nm is attributed to a charge-transfer (CT) transition due to its small hypsochromic shift on increasing solvent polarity. Solvatochromism was not observed for the band at 598 nm and this band is therefore assigned to a dipyrrin-based π–π* transition, a common feature for dipyrrin compounds and their transition metal complexes.53–55 In support of this latter assignment, DFT calculations show that both the HOMO and LUMO in 2 are ligand-based. A group theoretical analysis of the frontier set of molecular orbitals for 2, assuming C2v symmetry in solution as observed in the 1H NMR spectrum, reveals that many of the transitions departing from the occupied frontier orbitals are orbitally allowed. This includes the HOMO–LUMO transition and gives rise to an intense absorption with εmax of 42
000 dm3 mol−1 cm−1.
The involvement of ligand redox processes in the reduction of 2 is supported by cyclic voltammetry, EPR, DFT and X-ray crystallographic measurements. The uranyl complex 2 undergoes a total of three quasi-reversible reduction processes, the first two of which are separated by 210 mV and both lie in the region of previously reported U(VI)/U(V) uranyl redox couples.20,23,56,57 The observation of an organic radical with a simulated giso value of 1.9893 on chemical reduction of 2 with CoCp2 confirms that the first outer-sphere reduction, observed by CV to occur at E1/2 −0.97 V vs. Fc+/Fc, is due to the formation of the dipyrrin-radical U(VI) complex 2−. The lack of g-anisotropy and relatively small g-shift attests to the essentially zero U-character in the LUMO of 2 from the DFT calculations. This conclusion is also supported by the solid-state structure of 2− which displays no elongation of the uranyl oxo bonds expected for metal-centred reduction but some variation in dipyrrin bonding consistent with ligand-based reduction (see ESI†). The second outer-sphere reduction, observed at E1/2 −1.18 V, is therefore best assigned to the formation of a dipyrrin-radical U(V) complex. Monitoring the UV-vis spectra of the in situ reduction of 2 with one and two equivalents of CoCp2 supports these assignments, as distinct hypsochromic shifts and a decrease in the extinction coefficients of the charge transfer band are observed.58,59 No NIR absorptions are seen on reduction with one equivalent of CoCp2, supporting a ligand-based reduction in that case. NIR absorptions were also not observed following reaction of 2 with two equivalents of CoCp2; formation of U(V) should give rise to f–f transitions in the NIR region in this case. However, the product of this two-electron reduction is paramagnetic and NMR-silent, and so this second reduction cannot also be ligand-based, as such a reduction would form a diamagnetic, closed-shell ligand dianion coordinated to U(VI).
The third outer-sphere reduction, observed at E1/2 −2.02 V, could be due to either the formation of a dipyrrin-radical U(IV) complex or a U(V) complex in which the dipyrrin is doubly reduced. This third reduction process occurs at a potential similar to other U(V)/U(IV) redox couples so its assignment tends towards the former, but is more positive than those reported for related uranyl(V) Pacman complexes (Scheme 2).56,57 Attempts were made to isolate the product of chemical reduction of 2 with potassium metal (Eo = ca. −2.4 V), to determine whether the third reduction process is ligand- or metal-based. However, this reaction did not proceed cleanly and was therefore not investigated further.
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| Scheme 2 Contrasting outer- and inner-sphere reduction processes for the uranyl dipyrrin complex 2, highlighting ligand redox activity. | ||
In contrast to the outer-sphere reduction chemistry of 2, when chemical reduction was carried out with the dimeric Ti(III) inner-sphere reductant, [TiCp2Cl]2, the paramagnetic, doubly-titanated complex 3 was observed by NMR spectroscopy and after isolation on a preparative scale. However, the Ti(IV)/Ti(III) redox couple of [TiCp2Cl]2 is between −0.81 and −1.27 V vs. Fc+/Fc60,61 and is therefore similarly reducing to CoCp2, implying that only the dipyrrin-radical U(V) complex should be accessible. That no signal is seen in the EPR spectrum suggests that no ligand radical is present, i.e. that reduction to the U(IV) doubly-titanated complex 3 is favoured. This inference is also supported by the analysis of the U–O bond lengths measured by X-ray crystallography, U–O stretching frequency measured by IR spectroscopy and f–f transitions measured by NIR absorption spectroscopy, all of which are consistent with uranium adopting the +4 oxidation state in 3 (Scheme 2).
It is clear that the outer-sphere and inner-sphere reduction processes proceed by different mechanisms. The computational investigation highlights the redox non-innocence of the dipyrrin ligand and the role that coordination of the Lewis-acidic Ti centre to the uranyl oxo-group plays in promoting facile uranyl reduction, as seen recently for other uranyl-Lewis acid combinations.20,23,30 Therefore, the first single-electron, inner-sphere reduction occurs in two steps and results overall in an exergonic metal-based reduction by DFT calculations. In line with the evidence that the mono-reduced uranyl(V) complex 4 is, while not isolable, relatively stable against disproportionation, and the observation that no significant diamagnetic material is formed on outer-sphere reduction of 2, the formation of 3 is found not to proceed through a higher energy disproportionation of the uranyl(V) intermediate 4. This chemistry is similar to the reduction of uranyl ‘Pacman’ complexes in the presence of Lewis acids, although in these latter examples reduction to U(IV) has never been seen (perhaps due to the macrocyclic constraints limiting oxo-group access) and ligand-based redox activity has similarly not been observed. The outer-sphere reduction pathway is similarly exergonic according to the DFT calculations, forming sequentially mono-, di-, and trianionic compounds with ligand-based redox activity again implicit. It is apparent that the conversion of uranyl(VI) to U(IV) occurs by stepwise single-electron reduction with U(IV) favoured over U(V), and that the presence of the dipyrrin skeleton provides initial ligand-based redox activity that can assist subsequent reductions at the metal centre.
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: General procedures, synthetic details, NMR spectra, EPR spectra, IR spectra, electronic absorption and emission spectra, voltammetric data, X-ray crystallographic data, computational details and optimised geometries. CCDC 1446511, 1446512 and 1507634. For ESI and crystallographic data in CIF or other electronic format see DOI: 10.1039/c6sc02912d |
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