Complexation of amidocarbamoyl phosphine oxides with Ln+3 (Ln = La, Nd, Pm, Sm and Eu) cation series: structural and thermodynamical features
Author:
Hosseinnejad Tayebeh1,
Kazemi Tayebeh1
Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Physics & Chemistry, Alzahra University, Vanak, Tehran, Iran
Abstract
Abstract
In the present study, we have mainly investigated the nature of interactions in Ln3+ (Ln = La, Nd,
Pm, Sm, Eu) complexes with amidocarbamoyl methyl phosphine oxide (CMPO) and amidocarbamoyl propyl phosphine oxide
(CPPO) ligands based on density functional theory (DFT) approaches. In the first step, thermodynamical properties for complexation of
CMPO and CPPO ligands with Ln3+ cation series have been determined in the gas phase and with the presence of three solvents:
n-hexane, chloroform and toluene, via polarized continuum model (PCM) computations. The trend of metal-ligand interaction strength has
been analyzed and compared with the trend of ionic hardness within the series of lanthanide cations and different size of alkyl chain
of amidocarbamoyl phosphine oxide ligand. The calculated thermochemical results in the gas and solution phases reveals that there is
a consistency between increasing trend in the hardness of Ln3+ cation series and also electron-donating property of alkyl
chain with increasing in thermodynamical stability of [Ln–CMPO]3+ and [Ln–CPPO]3+ complex series. We have also
demonstrated that in the complexation reaction of all complex series, using n-hexane as solvent is more favorable thermodynamically
than chloroform and toluene. It should be stated that this issue has been observed in many experiments. Finally, analysis of calculated
deformation energies and also the variation in bond order of some selected key bonds in CMPO and CPPO ligands and their corresponded
Ln+3 complexes series show a similar trend with increasing in the hardness of Ln3+ cation series and
electron-donating of alkyl chain of amidocarbamoyl phosphine oxide ligand.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry