Oxygen-isotope-exchange rates were measured between sites in the Lindqvist-type [H(x)()Nb(6)O(19)](8)(-)(x)()((aq)) polyoxoanion and aqueous solution as a function of pH and temperature. The ion has a central mu(6)-O that is inert to exchange, 12 mu(2)-O(H), and 6 eta-O. The potassium salt of this ion is recrystallized in (17)O-enriched water to (17)O-label the anion, which is then redissolved into isotopically normal water so that the (17)O NMR signals from structural oxygens can be followed as a function of time. Because the central mu(6)-O retains its (17)O signal throughout the experiments, it is clear that the polyoxoanion remains intact during isotopic equilibration of the other structural oxygens. At pH conditions where the [HNb(6)O(19)](7)(-) ion predominates, the mu(2)-O(H) sites isotopically exchange with solution about an order of magnitude more rapidly than the eta-O sites. Yet, we observe that the terminal and bridging oxo sites react at nearly the same rates when the ion is coordinated to 2-3 protons and possibly when it is unprotonated. On the basis of molecular models and experimental kinetic data, we propose metastable polymorphs of the hexaniobate structure where four of the mu(2)-O(H) and eta-O sites are temporarily equivalent and bonded to a coordinatively unsaturated Nb(V). This hypothesized intermediate allows facile access to bulk water molecules for exchange but cannot fully explain the kinetic results and additional experiments on other Lindvist ions are required.
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Dalton Trans
June 2021
Department of Chemistry, National Central University, Zhongli, Taoyuan, Taiwan 320, Republic of China.. and Institute of Chemistry, Academia Sinica, Nnakang, Taipei, Taiwan 115, Republic of China.
An exploratory study of the lead-tellurium-oxygen phase space led to two new compounds, Ba3PbTe6O16 (BPTO) and Na2Pb9(μ6-O)2(Te2O10)2 (NPTO), which were synthesized under hydrothermal conditions at 550 °C and 210 °C, respectively, and characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, infrared and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. BPTO adopts a layer structure. The Te4+ cation in BPTO is bonded to four oxygen atoms at about 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Crystallogr Sect E Struct Rep Online
December 2014
INSA, UMR 6226, Institut des Sciences Chimiques de Rennes, 35 708 Rennes, France.
The crystal structure of the title compound {systematic name: octa-μ3-hydroxido-μ6-oxido-hexa-kis-[tetra-aqua-yttrium(III)] octa-iodide octa-hydrate}, is characterized by the presence of the centrosymmetric mol-ecular entity [Y6(μ6-O)(μ3-OH)8(H2O)24](8+), in which the six Y(3+) cations are arranged octa-hedrally around a μ6-O atom at the centre of the cationic complex. Each of the eight faces of the Y6 octa-hedron is capped by an μ3-OH group in the form of a distorted cube. In the hexa-nuclear entity, the Y(3+) cations are coordinated by the central μ6-O atom, the O atoms of four μ3-OH and of four water mol-ecules.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInorg Chem
March 2013
Institute of Inorganic Chemistry, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, v.v.i., Husinec-Řež 1001, 250 68 Řež, Czech Republic.
Rare-earth layered hydroxides with intercalated tetrasulfonated porphyrins and corresponding to the chemical formula Ln2(OH)4.7(Por)0.33·2H2O (Ln = Eu(3+), Tb(3+); Por = 5,10,15,20-tetrakis(4-sulfonatophenyl)porphyrin (TPPS) and PdTPPS) have been prepared to investigate their photophysical properties.
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