- Title
- Synthesis, crystal structures and molecular modelling of rare earth complexes with bis(2-pyridylmethyl)amine and its derivatives : a quantum chemical investigation of ligand conformational space, complex intramolecular rearrangement and stability
- Creator
- Matthews, Cameron
- Subject
- Rare earths
- Subject
- Complex compounds
- Subject
- Ligands
- Date Issued
- 2020
- Date
- 2020
- Type
- Thesis
- Type
- Doctoral
- Type
- PhD
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10948/46229
- Identifier
- vital:39517
- Description
- Limited research has been performed on the coordination behaviour of hybrid aliphatic and heterocyclic polyamines with trivalent rare earth elements. The rare earth coordination properties of several Nalkylated derivatives of the tridentate ligand bis(2-pyridylmethyl)amine (DPA, HL1) backbone - involving the rare earth elements Y, La-Nd, Sm, Eu and Tb-Lu - have been investigated in this study However, the structural and energetic characteristics of DPA coordination with rare earth elements (REE) have not been studied thus far. Potential applications of DPA-based rare earth complexes are primarily dependent on their electronic and magnetic characteristics, which are affected weakly by the coordination environment, where potential applications may include use as Lanthanide Shift Reagents (LSR), Luminescence probes and small-molecule magnets (SMM). A systematic conformational search of DPA was carried out in this study in order to identify the global minimum conformer and for comparison of the free and coordinated geometries, using the M06(D3) functional belonging to the Density Functional Theory (DFT) family of model chemistries. An understanding of the aforementioned would play an important role in analysis of bulk characterization and the prediction of the reactivity of DPA. Final geometries and electronic energies were obtained from the ‘domain based local pair natural orbital’ (DLPNO)-Møller-Plesset and -coupled cluster theoretical methods, as follows: DLPNO-CCSD(T0)/aug-cc-pVQZ//DLPNO-MP2/aug-cc-pVTZ. Fifteen Single-crystal X-ray diffractometer (SC-XRD) crystal structures of mononuclear rare earth chloride coordination complexes with DPA (RE = La-Nd, Sm, Eu, Tb-Lu and Y) were obtained and geometrically analysed in this study. Three isostructural series of constitutional isomers were identified, consisting of one series of nine-coordinate molecule (M1) and two series of eight-coordinate ion pairs (M2 and M3). This conformational diversity is most likely due the flexible nature of the DPA backbone, as well as the additional stability gained from reduced coordination spheres as a function of decreasing rare earth ionic radii across the lanthanide series (Lanthanide contraction). A Quantum Theory of Atoms-in-Molecules (QTAIM) topological analysis was performed in order to identify and characterise potential hydrogen bonding interactions in H-optimised crystal structures. The crystal structures of five dinuclear (RE = Tb-Tm) and two tetranuclear (RE = Yb and Lu) rare earth chloride complexes with DPA have also been structurally analysed. Furthermore, one mononuclear (RE = Dy), two dinuclear complexes (RE = Dy and Lu) with EtDPA, and one mononuclear complex with the DPA-derivative HL4 (RE = Dy) were structurally characterised. A DFT study of the theoretical interconversion of one real- and two hypothetical- mononuclear lanthanum containing isostructural series (cf. aforementioned crystal structures) was undertaken in order to gain a deeper understanding of the processes involved, in terms of the participating minimum energy paths (MEPs), intermediates and transition states – as determined via the Nudged-Elastic Band (NEB) procedure. This hypothesis is supported by the well-known conformational lability of rare earth complexes, due to the weak/minor covalency of their coordination bonds. An attempt was made to determine the respective energies of one real- and two hypothetical diamagnetic or ‘closed-shell’ constitutional isomers containing the rare earth ions La3+(M1), Y3+(M2) and Lu3+ (M3). It was assumed that the most stable isomers have a greater probability of being observed as the asymmetric unit of the complex crystal structure – assuming weak contributions of lattice or intermolecular interactions towards the geometry of the asymmetric unit.
- Format
- xxiv, 316 leaves
- Format
- Publisher
- Nelson Mandela University
- Publisher
- Faculty of Science
- Language
- English
- Rights
- Nelson Mandela University
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