Unprecedented lead–antimony oxohalide clusters with efficient capture of UO22+ ions
Abstract
The exploration of novel metal–oxo clusters with unique composition and functionality remains an attractive goal in the field of structural chemistry and materials chemistry. By employing a triply synergistic induction strategy that combines ligand induction with the structural tailoring effect of halide anions (I−) and lone pair electrons of low-valency p-block metal ions (Pb2+ and Sb3+ ions), two unprecedented organic ligand-decorated lead–antimony oxohalide cluster compounds have been successfully prepared, namely [(HTEOA)SbOPbI]4·2H2O (H3TEOA = triethanolamine) (1) and (HTEOA)3Sb3OPbI3·CH3OH (2). 1 features a sandwich configuration formed by two pairs of Sb–L (L = HTEOA) layers and a central [Pb4O4I4] unit. By contrast, 2 represents a crown configuration consisting of a [Sb3OL3] base and a [PbI3] cap. Compound 1 exhibits excellent irradiation stability and high removal capacity for UO22+ ions, with a rapid kinetics response reaching a removal rate (RU) of 99.89% within 5 minutes. Even in the presence of high concentrations of competing ions (e.g., Na+, Ca2+ and Mg2+) and in actual water samples, it maintains exceptional selectivity toward UO22+ with high removal efficiency (distribution coefficient (KUd) > 7.42 × 104 mL g−1, RU > 98.64%). This work not only represents a breakthrough in p-block heterometallic oxohalide cluster chemistry but also expands the potential of antimony oxohalide clusters for radionuclide remediation.

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