Lanthanides Flashcards

1
Q

why are lanthanide salts colourless/pale compared to d block salts?

A

They are very low intensity as d/d and f/f trs are laporte forbidden but these can become allowed if mixing occurs. F orbitals do not feel changes in geometry or or molecular vibrations, and remain pure f-orbitals with no mixing. So f-f transitions remain very weak. Unlike d orbitals where d/p mixing occurs.

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2
Q

why are f/f trs absorption peaks narrow by d/d absorptions peaks are broad?

A

d-d transitions are broad because vibrations of ligands affect d-orbital energies. As ligands vibrate the bond lenght changes and ∆oct changes. f orbital energies are unaffected by ligand vibrations so f-f
absorptions are fixed in energy and peaks are very narrow.

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3
Q

why do spin forbidden transitions occur easily for f/f trs but nor for d block elements?

A

High spin-orbit coupling for heavy atoms means that pure ‘spin’ quantum number is no longer valid (S and L mixed up in J) so spin selection rule is evaded.

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4
Q

Why do lanthanides photoluminescene?

A

Normally excited states lose their energy to mol vibrations. But weak interactions between f-orbitals and vibrating ligands mean that likelihood of f-f excited state energy being converted to molecular vibrations is low, so energy of excited state is emitted as a photon: luminescence.

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5
Q

when is luminescence strong?

A

when there is big energy gap between excited

state and ground state manifold (as here) because the energy gap is too large for any one vibration to take the energy.

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6
Q

true or false: The triplet excited state of the ligand needs to be higher in energy than the luminscent f/f level?

A

True

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7
Q

How do fluorescent lightbulbs work?

A

Red, green, blue solid state materials combine to give white light. excited state generated by UV light absorption from Hg vapour discharge. UV light re-absorbed by Ln3+ ions to give f/f excited states which emit a photon.

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8
Q

How do OLED`s work

A

stable and volatile diketonate complexes which are deposited across a thin film. High potential across device which injects eletrons and hole pairs at opposite. The energy released from their recombination induced lanthanide exited state - luminescence.

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9
Q

How do Nd(III) - YAG lasers work

A

Y3Al5O12 doped with ≈1% Nd3+ ions in Y3+ sites
irradiation of Nd3+ ions promotes ions from ground state (4I9/2) to manifold of levels state from 4F3/2 upwards
4F3/2 state is long-lived so end up with more Nd3+ ions in excited state than ground state (‘population inversion’)
these can be stimulated to collapse simultaneously resulting in intense burst photons with burst duration of ≈ 10 ns
Repopulation of excited state takes milliseconds: result is series of short pulses of laser light

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10
Q

How does luminescent imaging of cells work?

A

strong luminescent complexes can be used to light up cell interiors. Can selectivity light up different parts of the cell using molecules that localise in specific parts of the cell. More intense luminescence due to localisation of dye in protien rich areas due to interactions of proteins with dye.

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11
Q

why is the spin only formula applicable to d orbitals but not f orbitals.

A

this ignores contribution of orbital angular momentum. The movement of d electrons between orbitals generates orbital angular momentum but when the orbitals split electron is prevented from moving between orbitals and removes angular orbital momentum BUT In Ln3+ ions, orbital angular moment is (i) inherently larger (because L = 3), and (ii) not quenched by ligand-field splitting, so cannot be ignored.

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12
Q

how to get high µ values?

A

Large numbers of unpaired electrons (up to 7 for Gd3+) and high values of J

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13
Q

Why don`t Eu and Sm show good agreement of their calculated and observed values of µ?

A

spacings of energy levels close to ground state are small such that excited states with larger values of J are thermally accessible at RT:

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14
Q

Eu3+ has µ of zero despite being 7F0?

A

less than half filled. so L and S cancel each other

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15
Q

µ tends to 0 at low temperatures

when only 7F0 is populated why?

A

at low temperature these higher levels become depopulated: ( increase temp and higher levels populate - Appreciable population)

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16
Q

what does ∆δ mean?

A

weighted average of ‘normal’ and ‘shifted’ δ value depending what proportion of its time the substrate is ‘free’ or bound to Eu3+

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17
Q

How can lanthanides be NMR shift reagents?

A

Tris diketonates are good lewis acids and e rich organic molecules coordinate to them. The amount they are shifted depends on their proximity to the paramagnertic centre. Close they are they are shifted more

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18
Q

How can lanthanides be used to distinguish enatiomers?

A

Chiral shift reagent binds to one enantiomer of substrate more strongly than the other, giving differential shifts allowing enantiomers to be resolved eg Eu(facam)3

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19
Q

What affects the magnitude of ∆δ?

A

depends on the affinity of the lewis acid to the metal.stronger binding means that substrate spends more time bound to Eu3+ and is shifted more
(RNH2 > ROH > R2O > R2C=O > CO2R ≈ R2S > R-CN) – roughly correlates with ‘hardness’ of electron donor.

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20
Q

How are lanthanides used as a diagnostic tool for soft tissue?

A

Creates a 2D image by using HNMR signals of H in water. Uses a gradient magnetic field which varies at every point such that resonant frequency of 1H nucleus
depends on its spatial location.
• Intensity of signal depends on relaxation time (T1) of protons after excitation: a nucleus cannot absorb another photon until it has relaxed

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21
Q

How is Gd3+ used in imaging?

A

Highly paramagnetic Gd3+ complexes (4f7) have molecular vibrations which produce oscillating magnetic fields which stimulate excited 1H nuclei to relax faster. Effect proportional to 1/r6 so most effective on water molecules coordinated to Gd3+.

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22
Q

How do they make Gd3+ less toxic when used in soft tissue imagine?

A

Needs to be wrapped up in strongly binding ligand to give highly stable complex which does not liberate Gd3+ ions, Need a vacant site for water.

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23
Q

what type of ligands are used to bind to Gd3+ in soft tissue imaging?

A

anionic amino/carboxylate polydentate or ones with Hard N/O– donor set + strong chelate effect gives very stable complexes (log K > 20)
Ligands 7- or 8-dentate leaving space for 1 or 2 H2O molecules to bind to Gd3+

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24
Q

The distributions of Gd3+ in the body depends on what?

A

charge; hydrophobic or hydrophilic; ability to cross lipid membranes etc.) so different agents are used to visualise different parts of the body

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25
Q

How are tumors detected by Gd3+ complexes?

A

Magnevist’ is hydrophilic; does not cross cell membranes so accumulates in extra-cellular space. Tumours have more extracellular space than normal tissue so hydrophilic MRI agents will accumulate in cancerous areas and selectively enhance signals from those regions

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26
Q

How are gastro-intestinal tract / stomach illnesses imaged?

A

use [Gd(H2O)9]Cl3 trapped in pores of a zeolite: this suspension can be swallowed. Water molecules diffuse in and out of cavity to be relaxed by Gd(III)

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27
Q

what are the two differences in organometallic lanthanide(III) compounds compared to d-block organometallic compounds?

A

18 e rule not applicable- steric/electric effects dominate e count and coordination number.
No overlap with f orbitals and ligands means π back-bonding is not significant

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28
Q

what is the general route for σ-bonded organometallic lanthanide(III) complexes?

A

LnCl3 + 3 LiR → LnR3 + 3 LiCl
Ln(OR’)3 + 3 LiR → LnR3 + 3 Li(OR’)
the precipitation of stable Li salt is the driving force. in presence of excess LiR, reaction can go further if R is not too bulky

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29
Q

True or flase: are σ-bonded organometallic lanthanide(III) complexes water- and O2-sensitive?

A

True - they are very reactive

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30
Q

how are σ-bonded organometallic lanthanide(III) complexes stabilized?

A

stabilised by association with Li+ cations via bridging CH3 groups
Presence of additional coordinating groups to block metal sites can stabilise Ln(III)–alkyl complexes based on less bulky alkyl / aryl substituents

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31
Q

why is β-elimination important?

A

decomposition route (elimination of alkene to leave the hydride, Ln—H)

32
Q

Why cant the coordinated alkene be isolated?

A

No back bonding to stabilised alkene as f orbitals too bureid

33
Q

what does β-elimination need?

A

β-H on ligand
• Planar Ln–C–C–H
• Vacant coordination site on Ln
to accommodate H atom

34
Q

describe the bonding in LnCp3

A

Ionic bonding. Cyclopentadienyl is less basic than R- so is less susceptible to protonolysis.

35
Q

Why are there a range of solid state materials of Cp complexes

A

need to maximise coordination and minimise repulsive interactions between ligands.

36
Q

true or false: larger Ln ions do not form polymeric structures with cp ligands?

A

False - metal ion also has two close contacts with C atoms from adjacent LnCp3 unit

37
Q

Describe the bonding of Cp3Ho?

A

three normal η3-Cp plus one additional short contact (η1) with C atom of adjacent unit. Can be considered 10-coordinate

38
Q

Describe the bonding in LuCp3?

A

binds two Cp– ligands in normal η3 face-on mode and has η1 interactions with two additional bridging Cp– in polymeric chain

39
Q

How does the coordination number of metal solid CpLn depend on radius of the metal cation?

A

coordination number decreases from 11 to 8 due to lanthanide contraction across the series from La3+ to Lu3+

40
Q

LnCp3 complexes are lewis acids and break up polymeric chains by……

A

binding to CN in MeCN or O in Ph3P=O. The evidence for this is the vibration frequency of CN increases which confirms sigma donation.

41
Q

True or False: Cp occupies more space than three different monodentate ligands?

A

False

42
Q

How are Bis cyclopentadienyl complexes synthesised?

A

LnCl3 + 2 NaCp Cp2LnCl + 2 NaCl
2 LnCp3 + LnCl3 3 Cp2LnCl (ligand redistribution)
LnCp3 + HCl Cp2LnCl + C5H6 (protonolysis)

43
Q

How do Cp2Ln - Cl complexes increase coordination?

A

They can solvate and oligomerise via chloride bridges to increase coordination according to size.

44
Q

Bis cyclopentadienyl complexes are starting materials for what type of complex. give equations

A

Cp2LnCl serve as starting materials for Cp2Ln–R and Cp2Ln–H.
Alkyls: Cp2LnCl + R–Li Cp2Ln–R + LiCl
Hydrides: Cp2LnCl + MH Cp2Ln–H + MCl (metathesis)
Can also use H2/THF (THF coordinates too) or H2/Toluene

45
Q

Why are organometallic lanthanide(III) complexes useful?

A

General decrease in ionic radii means you can fine tune steric and electronic properties which gives precise control over reactivity and selectivity
Highly labile- rapid dissociation and binding of substrate
variable coordination number means changes in cyclic reactions can be easily accommodated.

46
Q

Name one use of Cp*2Ln–H?

A

alkene hydrogenation catalysts

47
Q

Why arent oxygen donating solvents used?

A

would result in solvent coordination to vacant sites and kill the catalytic reaction (because binding of substrate alkenes is weak).Cp* rings (C5Me5–) solubilise catalyst in non-coordinating hydrocarbon solvents, preventing blocking of coordination site

48
Q

describe the process of catalytic alkene hydrogenation?

A
  1. Alkene coordinates
  2. Attack of hydride on alkene to give alky complex
  3. Reaction hydrogen liberates product and regenerates catalyst.
49
Q

How can catalytic activity of Cp*2Ln–H be increased?

A

Tying back to cp ligands. This reduces steric congestion anf allows greater access to substrate.

50
Q

describe the reaction mixture for catalytic polymerization of alkenes?

A

Monomer/dimer equilibrium involving formation of methly bond.

51
Q

Describe the steps in catalytic polymerization of alkenes?

A

Initiation (step 1): attack of methyl group on alkene to give coordinated alkyl R
Propagation (step 2): same reaction – attack of alkyl chain R on alkene to give longer chain R with two monomer units, etc.
Three possible termination steps: B-H and beta me elimination

52
Q

How is CH activated in catalytic polymerization of alkenes?

A

Use proton from incoming alkene to eliminate alkyl chain as alkane.

53
Q

why are lanthanide lewis acids better than the usual lewis acids eg BF3

A

Not moisture sensitive as you have hard metal centres
Labile Ln- Ligands bonds
large ionic radii and variable coordination number means that a wide range of substrates can bind.

54
Q

How are lewis acid lanthanides are used in diels alder reactions?

A

Eu(fod)3 coordinated to aldehyde making it more susceptible to attack. This is also a chemical shift reagent but doesnt damage acid sensitive groups.

55
Q

What are lanthanide triflates?

A

They are anhydrous Ln salts which are slightly soluble and catalyse a range of reactions eg friedal crafts

56
Q

How are complexes in ox state 4+ useful?

A

Ce4+ is accessible in solutions. 1 electron oxidant. used as double salts eg CAN and CAS

57
Q

How are complexes in ox 2+ useful?

A

Reducing agents. SmI2 is soluble in THF and is a lewis acid which facilitates transfer reactions.

58
Q

Describe the radial distribution function of orbitals?

A

4f orbitals penetrate closer to the nucleus so electrons are held more closely. 6s and 5d electrons lost first.

59
Q

why is ionisation after 4+ not accessible?

A

as positive charge increases, 4f orbitals stabilised by Zeff so much that ionisation after 3+ not possible

60
Q

Why is the fourth ionisation energy greater than the first three combined?

A

Not recovered ny formation of chemical bond

61
Q

Why do some lanthanides have +2 ox state? give examples

A

stability of half filled and filled shells make 3rd ionisation energy high. Eu anf Yb.most accessible. Sm and Tm is solutions and Nd and Dy is solid state.

62
Q

why do some lathanides have +4 oxi state?

A

4th ionisation low in these cases. 1 electron surplas from being half filled or empty. Ce4+ and tb4+ most accessible.

63
Q

what is the lanthanide contraction?

A

increasing nuclear charge along series is not compensated for by extra electron giving higher zeff leading to a reduction in ionic/atomic radii

64
Q

why do lanthanides bind to hard ligands eg N and O donors?

A

No overlap with highly contracted 4f orbitals means that bonding is essentially ionic. REMEMEBER soft ligands do not bind to Ln cations

65
Q

why is there no electronic preference for particular geometries?

A

No CFSE effects and 4f orbitals do not interact with ligands. ligands orient themselves to reduce steric/electrostactic repulsion

66
Q

true or false: Ln3+ cations behave very differently to each other?

A

false - they behave similarly with small differences from one to the next due to a steady decrease in radius

67
Q

what is the best way to pack aqua complexes of Ln ions?

A

Tricapped trigonal prism

68
Q

why are aqua lanthanides only stable in acidic solutions?

A

get hydrolysis to give insoluble hydroxides due to stabilisation of OH- ion by Ln+3 cation

69
Q

why won`t other monodentate ligands bind in water?

A

The [ln(H20)x]+3 is a very strong interaction

70
Q

how are high coordination numbers achieved?

A

Chelating ligands where the donor atoms are close togther eg NO3-

71
Q

why is the separation of lanthanides difficult?

A

the mixture of ions all have similar charges, sizes and behaviours

72
Q

how do you obtain a crude mixture of lanthanide salts in solution?

A

hot concentrated base- dissolve in hot conc NaOH and you obtain a slurry of hydrated oxides Ln2O3.H20
then,
boiling in strong acids: Dissolve oxides in conc HCl to obtain aqua lanthanides as chloride salts

73
Q

describe the process of loading?

A

extract aq solution on Ln3+ salts with HL in an organic phase. heavier and smaller ions bind more strongly to L- so are preferentially extracted. Therefore the organic phase is enriched with heavier and smaller ions

the aq phase is enriched with lighter larger lathanides.

74
Q

describe the process of stripping

A

the lanthanides are stripped from the organic phase using aq acid which reverses the equilibrium in the loading process. Strong acid may be needed to separate them from L- and get them back into the aqueous phase

75
Q

describe the process of ion exchange

A

for smaller quantities,
involves a resin on polystyrene beads with anionic sulfonate groups
the ln ions have a high affinity for the Ln groups and so displace Na
elute using a solution of good ligand and the Ln ion is partitioned between the stationary phase and mobile phase

76
Q

If Edta was used as the mobile phase in ion exchange chromatography what would elute first?

A

Smaller heavier ions have a higher affinity for Edta so would elute first.

77
Q

why do the f orbitals remain essentially degenerate?

A

f orbitals are buried and scarcely affected by presence of ligands