Assemblies of Increasingly Large Ln-Containing Polyoxoniobates and Intermolecular Aggregation-Disaggregation Interconversions

Rong Da Lai, Jing Zhang, Xin Xiong Li*, Shou Tian Zheng*, Guo Yu Yang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

33 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

An oxalate-assisted lanthanide (Ln) incorporation strategy is first demonstrated for creating rare high-nuclearity Ln-containing polyoxoniobates (PONbs). With the strategy, a series of high-nuclearity Ln-containing PONbs of 50-nuclearity Dy2Nb48, 103-nuclearity Dy7Nb96, 200-nuclearity Dy10Nb190, and 206-nuclearity Dy14Nb192have been made, showing an increasingly large structure evolution from Dy2Nb48monomer to Dy7Nb96dimer and to distinct Dy10Nb190and Dy14Nb192tetramers. Among them, Dy14Nb192presents the largest heterometallic PONb and also the PONb with the greatest number of Ln ions reported thus far. Interestingly, both giant Dy14Nb192and Dy10Nb190molecules can further undergo single-crystal to single-crystal intermolecular aggregations, forming infinite {Dy14Nb192}and {Dy10Nb190}chains, respectively. The former structural transformation shows a reversible humidity-dependent aggregation-disaggregation process accompanied by a proton conductivity response, while the latter structural transformation is irreversible. These new species largely enrich the very limited members of Ln-containing PONb family and offer rare examples for studying structural transformations between giant molecular aggregates and infinitely extended structures at the atomic level.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)19603-19610
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume144
Issue number42
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 26 Oct 2022

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