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1.
Dalton Trans ; 44(12): 5535-46, 2015 Mar 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25697291

ABSTRACT

Gold compounds, clusters, and nanoparticles are widely used as catalysts and therapeutic medicines; the interactions between gold and its ligands in these systems play important roles in their chemical properties and functionalities. In order to elucidate the nature of the chemical interactions between Au(I) and its ligands, herein we use several theoretical methods to study the chemical bonding in a variety of linear [AuX2](-) complexes, where X = halogen atoms (F, Cl, Br, I, At and Uus), H, OH, SH, OCH3, SCH3, CN and SCN. It is shown that the most important bonding orbitals in these systems have significant contributions from the Au sd hybridized atomic orbitals. The ubiquitous linear or quasi-linear structures of [AuX2](-) are attributed to the well-balanced optimal overlap in both σ and π bonding orbitals and minimal repulsion between the two negatively charged ligands. The stability of these complexes is related to the covalency of the Au-X bond and a periodic trend is found in the evolution of covalency along the halogen group ligands. The special stability of [Au(CN)2](-) is a result of strong covalent and ionic interactions. For the superheavy element Uus, the covalency of Au-Uus is enhanced through the spin-orbit interactions.

2.
J Phys Chem B ; 118(48): 13954-62, 2014 Dec 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25361071

ABSTRACT

LiF-ThF4 molten salt (MS) is the fuel for advanced MS reactors. Knowledge of the microscopic MS structure and dynamics is required for an understanding of the macroscopic physical and chemical properties of the MS phases. We have performed molecular dynamics simulations on LiF-ThF4 MS at different molar percentages (LiF/ThF4 = 20.0 to 0.5) and temperatures (1100 to 1400 K). Experimental deductions and recent theoretical results on the coordination structures and transport properties of the MS are well reproduced. The density of states of the [ThF8](4-) species and the character of the Th-F bonding are investigated. The interplay between the microscopic structures and the dynamical properties is elucidated. Corresponding to the smaller effective radius of Zr, the activation barrier of the M(4+)-F(-) dissociation and the lifetime of the first coordination shell of M(4+) are both smaller for M = Th than for M = Zr in the respective LiF-MF4 systems. The shorter Zr-F bond is stronger than the longer Th-F bond, while the coordination number of the predominant [ZrF7](3-) species is smaller than that of the dominant [ThF8](4-) species. An approximate formula is proposed for the lifetime of F(-) ions in the first solvation shell of molten MFn (M = Y, Zr, Th) in terms of the radial distribution function.

3.
Inorg Chem ; 52(11): 6617-26, 2013 Jun 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23662677

ABSTRACT

While uranyl halide complexes [UO2(halogen)n](2-n) (n = 1, 2, 4) are ubiquitous, the tricoordinate species have been relatively unknown until very recently. Here photoelectron spectroscopy and relativistic quantum chemistry are used to investigate the bonding and stability of a series of gaseous tricoordinate uranyl complexes, UO2X3(-) (X = F, Cl, Br, I). Isolated UO2X3(-) ions are produced by electrospray ionization and observed to be highly stable with very large adiabatic electron detachment energies: 6.25, 6.64, 6.27, and 5.60 eV for X = F, Cl, Br, and I, respectively. Theoretical calculations reveal that the frontier molecular orbitals are mainly of uranyl U-O bonding character in UO2F3(-), but they are from the ligand valence np lone pairs in the heavier halogen complexes. Extensive bonding analyses are carried out for UO2X3(-) as well as for the doubly charged tetracoordinate complexes (UO2X4(2-)), showing that the U-X bonds are dominated by ionic interactions with weak covalency. The U-X bond strength decreases down the periodic table from F to I. Coulomb barriers and dissociation energies of UO2X4(2-) → UO2X3(-) + X(-) are calculated, revealing that all gaseous dianions are in fact metastable. The dielectric constant of the environment is shown to be the key in controlling the thermodynamic and kinetic stabilities of the tetracoordinate uranyl complexes via modulation of the ligand-ligand Coulomb repulsions.

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