U2N@Ih(7)-C80: fullerene cage encapsulating an unsymmetrical U(iv)NU(v) cluster†
Abstract
For the first time, an actinide nitride clusterfullerene, U2N@Ih(7)-C80, is synthesized and fully characterized by X-ray single crystallography and multiple spectroscopic methods. U2N@Ih(7)-C80 is by far the first endohedral fullerene that violates the well-established tri-metallic nitride template for nitride clusterfullerenes. The novel UNU cluster features two UN bonds with uneven bond distances of 2.058(3) Å and 1.943(3) Å, leading to a rare unsymmetrical structure for the dinuclear nitride motif. The combined experimental and theoretical investigations suggest that the two uranium ions show different oxidation states of +4 and +5. Quantum-chemical investigation further reveals that the f1/f2 population dominantly induces a distortion of the UNU cluster, which leads to the unsymmetrical structure. A comparative study of U2X@C80 (X = C, N and O) reveals that the U–X interaction in UXU clusters can hardly be seen as being formed by classical multiple bonds, but is more like an anionic central ion Xq− with biased overlaps with the two metal ions, which decrease as the electronegativity of X increases. This study not only demonstrates the unique bonding variety of actinide clusters stabilized by fullerene cages, showing different bonding from that observed for the lanthanide analogs, it also reveals the electronic structure of the UXU clusters (X = C, N and O), which are of fundamental significance to understanding these actinide bonding motifs.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Celebrating the 110th Anniversary of chemistry at Soochow University