TY - JOUR
T1 - Guest Transition Metals in Host Inorganic Nanocapsules
T2 - Single Sites, Discrete Electron Transfer, and Atomic Scale Structure
AU - Haviv, Eynat
AU - Chen, Bo
AU - Carmieli, Raanan
AU - Houben, Lothar
AU - Cohen, Hagai
AU - Leitus, Gregory
AU - Avram, Liat
AU - Neumann, Ronny
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2020/8/26
Y1 - 2020/8/26
N2 - Host-guest solution chemistry with a wide range of organic hosts is an important and established research area, while the use of inorganic hosts is a more nascent area of research. In the recent past in a few cases, Keplerate-type molybdenum oxide-based porous, spherical clusters, shorthand notation {Mo132}, have been used as hosts for organic guests. Here, we demonstrate the synthetically controlled encapsulation of first-row transition metals (M = Mn, Fe, and Co) within a Keplerate cluster that was lined on the inner core with phosphate anions, {Mo132PO4}. The resulting M2+x⊂{Mo132PO4} host-guest complexes were characterized by 31P NMR and ENDOR spectroscopy that substantiated the encapsulation of the first-row transition metal guest. Magnetic susceptibility measurements showed that the encapsulation of up to 10 equiv showed little magnetic interaction between the encapsulated metals, which indicated that each guest atom occupied a single site. Visualization of the capsules and differentiation of the Mo atoms of the capsule framework and the encapsulated transition metal were possible using spherical and chromatic double aberration-corrected electron microscopy combined with energy-filtered TEM (EFTEM) elemental maps. In addition, use of visible light-induced XPS for chemically resolved electrical measurements (CREM) confirmed the successful encapsulation of M within {Mo132PO4} and furthermore showed photoinduced electron transfer from M to Mo. In the future, such targeted electron transfer between host {Mo132} and a transition metal guest could be used as photoinitiated switches using inorganic compounds and for single site photocatalytic reactions in confined space.
AB - Host-guest solution chemistry with a wide range of organic hosts is an important and established research area, while the use of inorganic hosts is a more nascent area of research. In the recent past in a few cases, Keplerate-type molybdenum oxide-based porous, spherical clusters, shorthand notation {Mo132}, have been used as hosts for organic guests. Here, we demonstrate the synthetically controlled encapsulation of first-row transition metals (M = Mn, Fe, and Co) within a Keplerate cluster that was lined on the inner core with phosphate anions, {Mo132PO4}. The resulting M2+x⊂{Mo132PO4} host-guest complexes were characterized by 31P NMR and ENDOR spectroscopy that substantiated the encapsulation of the first-row transition metal guest. Magnetic susceptibility measurements showed that the encapsulation of up to 10 equiv showed little magnetic interaction between the encapsulated metals, which indicated that each guest atom occupied a single site. Visualization of the capsules and differentiation of the Mo atoms of the capsule framework and the encapsulated transition metal were possible using spherical and chromatic double aberration-corrected electron microscopy combined with energy-filtered TEM (EFTEM) elemental maps. In addition, use of visible light-induced XPS for chemically resolved electrical measurements (CREM) confirmed the successful encapsulation of M within {Mo132PO4} and furthermore showed photoinduced electron transfer from M to Mo. In the future, such targeted electron transfer between host {Mo132} and a transition metal guest could be used as photoinitiated switches using inorganic compounds and for single site photocatalytic reactions in confined space.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85090070262&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/jacs.0c05264
DO - 10.1021/jacs.0c05264
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C2 - 32786785
AN - SCOPUS:85090070262
SN - 0002-7863
VL - 142
SP - 14504
EP - 14512
JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
IS - 34
ER -