A crystalline tri-thorium cluster: σ-aromaticity vs charge-shift bonding

25 March 2022, Version 4
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Very recently, Boronski et al. reported the first thorium-thorium bond in a crystalline cluster prepared under normal experimental conditions. By using a range of experimental techniques and computational models, the authors found that the isolated actinide cluster contains at its heart two paired electrons delocalized over the tri-thorium ring. The recorded Raman spectrum allegedly confirmed the existence of a σ-aromatic three-center two-electron bond. In the following we demonstrate that the experimentally observed broad inelastic scattering bands between 60 and 135 cm-1, originally assigned by the authors to thorium-thorium vibrations, represent the combination of Th–Cl stretching and Th–Cl–Th bending modes, and they establish the existence of an unprecedented multicenter charge-shift bonding (ThCl2)3 rather than the σ-aromatic bonding Th3. In the light of the presented findings, the latter remains experimentally unproven and computationally questionable.

Keywords

Actinides
Aromaticity
Charge-Shift Bonding
3c-2e Bond

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
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Supporting Information contains additional Figures, Tables , XYZ coordinates, and details of the computational methods employed to perform the present work
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