Mediating Photochemical Reaction Rates at Lewis Acidic Lanthanides by Selective Energy Loss to 4f-Electron States

04 November 2022, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Manifesting chemical differences in individual rare earth (RE) element complexes is challenging due to the similar sizes of the tripositive cations and the core-like 4f-shell. We disclose a new strategy for differentiating between similarly-sized Dy3+ and Y3+ complexes through a tailored photochemical reaction, where the f-electron states of Dy3+ act as an energy sink. Complexes RE(hfac)3(NMMO)2 RE = Dy (2-Dy), Y (2-Y), hfac– = hexafluoroacetylacetonate, NMMO = N-methyl-morpholine-N-oxide, synthesized from their hydrated precursors, showed variable rates of oxygen atom-transfer to triphenylphosphine acceptor under UV irradiation, as monitored by 1H- and 19F-NMR spectroscopies. Ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy identified the excited state(s) responsible for the photochemical OAT reaction. Sensitization pathways leading to excited state deactivation in 2-Dy through energy transfer to the 4f-electron manifold ultimately slow the reaction at that metal cation. The measured rate differences between the open- and closed-shell Dy3+ and Y3+ complexes demonstrates that using established principles of 4f-ion sensitization may deliver new, selective modalities for differentiating the elements that do not depend on cation size.

Keywords

lanthanide
photochemistry
photophysics
oxygen atom transfer
critical materials

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
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Title
Supplementary experimental information and characterization
Description
Synthesis and chemical/structural characterization of lanthanide complexes. Photochemical kinetics experiments to determine reaction rates. Transient absorption spectroscopy and photoluminescence of lanthanide complexes.
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