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  4. Selective Self-Assembly of Hexameric Homo- and Heteropolymetallic Lanthanide Wheels: Synthesis, Structure, and Photophysical Studies
 
research article

Selective Self-Assembly of Hexameric Homo- and Heteropolymetallic Lanthanide Wheels: Synthesis, Structure, and Photophysical Studies

Chen, Xiao-Yan
•
Bretonnière, Yann
•
Pecaut, Jacques
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2007
Inorganic Chemistry

A rational approach to the formation of pure heteropolymetallic lanthanide complexes that uses a two-step assembly strategy and exploits the different size requirements of the two metals included in the final structure is described. The investigation of the assembly of LnL2 (L = 2,2':6',2' '-terpyridine-6-carboxylate) complexes into hexametallic rings hosting an additional hexacoordinated lanthanide cation was crucial for the development of this strategy. The formation and size of the cyclic assembly are controlled by the ionic radius and by the coordination number of the lanthanides. The rather high luminescence quantum yield of the heptaeuropium complex (25%) indicates that the ring structure is well adapted to include highly luminescent lanthanide complexes in nanosized architecture. The use of a stepwise synthetic strategy leads to the selective assembly of large heteropolymetallic rings. The addition of a smaller lanthanide ion to the EuL2 complex in anhydrous acetonitrile leads selectively to heterometallic species with the Eu ions located on the peripheral sites and the smaller ion occupying only the central site. The high selectivity is the result of the different size requirements of the two metal sites present in the cyclic structure. The heterometallic structure of the isolated Lu C (EuL2)69 complex was confirmed by X-ray diffraction and by high resolution solid-state photophysical studies. The described synthetic approach allowed us to obtain the first example of selective assembly of two different lanthanide ions in a large polymetallic structure characterized in solution and in the solid state and will make the isolation of planned dimetallic combinations presenting different lanthanide emitters in the peripheral sites possible.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/ic061806o
Web of Science ID

WOS:000243789400008

Author(s)
Chen, Xiao-Yan
Bretonnière, Yann
Pecaut, Jacques
Imbert, Daniel  
Bunzli, Jean-Claude  
Mazzanti, Marinella  
Date Issued

2007

Published in
Inorganic Chemistry
Volume

46

Issue

3

Start page

625

End page

637

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LCSL  
SCI-SB-MM  
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/3109
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