The bottom-up synthesis of ligand-stabilized functional nanoparticles from molecular precursors is widely applied but is difficult to study mechanistically. Here we use 31P NMR spectroscopy to follow the trajectory of phosphinate ligands during the synthesis of a range of ligated zinc oxo clusters, containing 4, 6 and 11 zinc atoms. Using an organometallic route, the clusters interconvert rapidly and self-assemble in solution based on thermodynamic equilibria rather than nucleation kinetics. These clusters are also identified in situ during the synthesis of phosphinate-capped zinc oxide nanoparticles. Unexpectedly, the ligand is sequestered to a stable Zn11 cluster during the majority of the synthesis and only becomes coordinated to the nanoparticle surface, in the final step. In addition to a versatile and accessible route to (optionally doped) zinc clusters, the findings provide an understanding of the role of well-defined molecular precursors during the synthesis of small (2-4 nm) nanoparticles.
The bottom-up synthesis of ligand-stabilized functional nanoparticles from moleclass="Chemical">cular class="Chemical">prepan class="Chemical">cursors is widely applied but is difficult to study mechanistically. Here we use 31P NMR spectroscopy to follow the trajectory of phosphinate ligands during the synthesis of a range of ligated zinc oxo clusters, containing 4, 6 and 11 zinc atoms. Using an organometallic route, the clusters interconvert rapidly and self-assemble in solution based on thermodynamic equilibria rather than nucleation kinetics. These clusters are also identified in situ during the synthesis of phosphinate-capped zinc oxide nanoparticles. Unexpectedly, the ligand is sequestered to a stable Zn11 cluster during the majority of the synthesis and only becomes coordinated to the nanoparticle surface, in the final step. In addition to a versatile and accessible route to (optionally doped) zinc clusters, the findings provide an understanding of the role of well-defined molecular precursors during the synthesis of small (2-4 nm) nanoparticles.
class="Chemical">Zinc oxide nanoparticles are used in a huge range of contexts, ranging from wide band gap
semiconductors and class="Chemical">photo-electronic materials123, to catalysts and
class="Chemical">photoactive antimicrobial surfaces45678. Individualized
nanoparticles are synthesized in solution via a similar broad range of techniques
including sol-gel chemistry and hydrolysis/thermolysis routes9101112131415. Regardless of the synthesis method, pan class="Chemical">ZnO and
indeed other nanoparticles are frequently capped by surfactants or organic ligands,
commonly alkyl amines or carboxylic acids, to maximize solubility during growth and use.
In these cases, as with many nanoparticle systems, a ligand is usually implicitly
considered to control the synthesis, even if exchanged later1617.
Despite the importance of such systems, the detailed mechanism by which discrete, often
monometallic, molecular precursors and ligands are combined to form functionalized
nanoparticles is not well understood1819. One very attractive approach
to ZnO nanoparticle synthesis, pioneered by Chaudret and colleagues10,
hydrolyses organo-zinc reagents, at room temperature in organic solvents, to form
crystalline Wurztite products1220. This route provides small particles
and is compatible with thermally sensitive organic/polymer chemistry21;
it has enabled the preparation of high-performance composite photovoltaic (PV)
cells2223, colloidal catalysts2024 and
antimicrobial plastics4. In the context of the mechanistic studies
reported below, the route provides the opportunity for detailed control of
precursor/ligand stoichiometry, as excess ligand can be avoided12, and
the extent of reaction is limited by water supply.
class="Chemical">Metallic cluster complexes can grow to more than 1 nm in size and bridge between the
domains of molepan class="Chemical">cules and nanoparticulates25; they frequently show unusual
and impressive optical, electronic and magnetic properties2627. In
contrast, the field of zinc-oxo cluster chemistry is relatively less developed, although
it is known that alkyl zinc alkoxide/carboxylate clusters are useful precursors to form
ZnO nanoparticles and thin films9111213151828. Doped
materials may also be prepared from heterobimetallic clusters, with improved properties
attributed to intimate mixing of the two metals1328. Furthermore,
tetrahedral zinc carboxylate clusters,
[Zn4O(CO2R)6], are ubiquitous vertices in
metal organic frameworks (MOFs), showing outstanding gas sorption and separation
characteristics, although they can be sensitive to attack from water or donor
solvents2930313233. The metal-oxygen framework structures of
reported precursors do not generally map directly onto the Wurzite–ZnO
structure1012; therefore, their transformations into
nanoparticulate ZnO probably involves significant molecular rearrangement. In the case
of [RZnOR]4 complexes, alkoxide is lost before ZnO nucleation (to a
Wurzite structure) and the relationship of the ligands to the growing nanoparticle is
not clear. Here we show that ligands may coordinate to cluster species, which act as
spectators, while ZnO nucleation occurs and act as a ‘ligand reservoir' that
is only consumed at the end of the synthesis procedure.
Although the class="Chemical">alkyl zinc cluster chemistry using ligands such as pan class="Chemical">alkoxide or carboxylate
shows significant promise13343536373839, utilization of
alternative ligands is less well explored. Furthermore, attempts to analyse the
speciation during carboxylate/alkoxide precursor transformations result in product
mixtures and broadened, complex nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra. In contrast,
ligands coordinated with a P-containing group provide a 31P NMR
spectroscopic handle that allows for simple identification of individual cluster
geometries even when a complicated mixture is present. Various discrete complexes of
zinc phosphonate [RPO3]2– or dialkylphosphate
[(RO)2PO2]– are known as viable
precursors to nanomaterials404142. One stand-out example is a
well-defined Zn12 cluster, which contains a Zn4O core surrounded
by Zn−Et fragments supported by eight phosphonate ligands41. This
cluster is proposed to be a viable precursor to porous zincophosphonate materials.
Phosphinate ([R2PO2]–) ligands are
iso-electronic with carboxylates and could be attractive alternatives. The parent
phosphinic acids are more acidic than carboxylic acids (for example,
pKa: diphenylphosphinic acid (DPPA-H), 2.3; benzoic acid, 4.2) and
thus, although the bonding to zinc is slightly weaker, they should be less susceptible
to hydrolysis. Furthermore, having two R groups increases their steric protection and
enhances hydrophobicity. Stability to hydrogenation and good solubilizing properties
make dioctylphosphinate an interesting ligand for supporting nanoparticles used for
quasi-homogeneous hydrogenation catalysis (for example, the hydrogenation of
CO2 to MeOH)20. Despite their promise as ligands,
well-defined zinc complexes and clusters coordinated by monoanionc phosphinate ligands
are hardly studied43.
Here, the reactions of simple, commercially-available class="Chemical">diethyl zinc with various
equivalents of pan class="Chemical">phosphinic acids and water are used to reproducibly prepare a series of
new clusters, which are all fully characterized, including by X-ray diffraction (XRD;
Fig. 1). Alongside more typical alkyl zinc ligand and
tetrahedral Zn4O(ligand)6 clusters, some very unusual larger
structures are identified, including partially hydrolysed zinc clusters and those
containing hydroxy or boroxine cores. Interestingly, these species all show equilibrium
relationships with each other and other small molecules, suggesting the clusters may
readily interconvert in solution. With the detailed understanding of these species, it
is possible to directly identify them in situ during the synthesis of ZnO
nanoparticles.
Figure 1
Zinc cluster complexes.
The zinc cluster structures and their interconversions, where
L=R2PO2H, R=Ph,
C6H4OMe or C8H17 (4
only formed with R=Ph).
Results
Synthesis of zinc phosphinate cluster complexes
The first part of the study foclass="Chemical">cused on understanding and characterizing the
species class="Chemical">present during simple reactions between pan class="Chemical">diethyl zinc and DPPA-H (as a
model ligand). Thus, the reaction between equimolar quantities of
ZnEt2 and DPPA-H forms a new tetra-zinc cluster, 1A. Its
31P{1H} NMR spectrum shows a sharp singlet
(23.2 p.p.m.) and the 1H NMR spectrum shows a 1:1 ratio of
ethyl:DPPA resonances (Supplementary
Figs 1 and 2). Although the structures of alkyl zinc phosphinate
complexes are not yet reported, alkyl zinc carboxylates adopt a range of
chemical structures44, including hexa-35 or
pentanuclear complexes373839. Crystals of 1A, analysed
by XRD, show a distorted cubic structure
[Zn4Et4(DPPA)4] with a
tetrahedral arrangement of zinc atoms (Fig. 2 and Supplementary Figs 3,4). Each zinc
is singly coordinated to a P=O oxygen (P=O range,
1.492(2)–1.497(2) Å) and each P−O–
oxygen atom (P–O range, 1.531(2)–1.534(2) Å) bridges
between two zinc centres. The shape of 1A is most closely related to the
‘cubane' structures of alkyl zinc alkoxides but with the phosphinate
ligand adopting bidentate chelation13.
Figure 2
Solid-state structure of 1A.
H-atoms omitted for clarity; a view of the Zn cluster core structure, with
the phenyl/ethyl groups omitted, is provided within the coloured circle.
Compound 1A is highly moisture sensitive and the addition of ∼2 eq. of
class="Chemical">water (allowing full hydrolysis of all pan class="Chemical">Zn−Et bonds) forms a new species,
2A, which also exhibits a single peak in the
31P{1H} NMR spectrum (32.9 p.p.m.; Supplementary Figs 5–8).
Complex 2A is also a tetrazinc cluster of the form
[Zn4(μ4-O)(DPPA)6],
featuring a central μ4-oxo atom and six phosphinate ligands
(Supplementary Fig. 9); the
excess zinc/ethyl is likely to be hydrolysed to form NMR-silent insoluble ZnO
particles. Compound 2A can also be directly prepared, in quantitative
yield (NMR spectroscopy), by reaction of a 4:6:1 ratio of
ZnEt2:DPPA-H:water, in toluene or CH2Cl2 (Fig. 3). The matrix-assisted laser
desorption/ionization–time of flight (MALDI–ToF) mass spectrum shows
a peak for [Zn4O(DPPA)5]+ in
keeping with the expected cluster formula (Supplementary Fig. 7). The 1H
NMR spectrum shows a single environment for the phenyl substituents in 2A
(Supplementary Fig. 6). The
crystal structures of 2A, grown either from toluene or
CH2Cl2/hexane, show four independent molecules in the
asymmetric unit. The phenyl groups could not be located to acceptable degrees of
accuracy; however,
[Zn4(μ4-O)(O2P)6]
units were observed (Supplementary Figs
9, 10). By using bis(4-methoxyphenyl)phosphinic acid, a fully
resolvable crystal structure of 2B was obtained, a complex with an
analogous structure to 2A (Fig. 3a). The structure
of 2B shows a tetrahedral core of Zn4O capped by six bidentate
ligands, which show equal P−O bond lengths (within error), indicating a
delocalized coordination mode (Supplementary Figs 11–15). Although such structures are not yet
known for phosphinate ligands, they are commonly observed for other anionic
ligands and the benzenedicarboxylateZn4O cluster is a common
construct in MOFs293045.
Figure 3
Synthetic path and solid-state structures of 2B and 3A.
Structures: (a) 2B and (b) 3A (H-atoms omitted
for clarity). Views of the Zn cluster core structures, with aromatic groups
omitted, are provided inside the coloured circle/box c) Synthesis and
equilibrium of 2A/B and 3A/B.
Reagents:(a) 1 eq. H2O, toluene or
CH2Cl2. (b) 5 eq. H2O.
Samples of 2A exposed to moisture led to the formation of a new complex,
3A, which displays two class="Chemical">31P NMR signals in a 2:1 ratio
(30.1 (1P), 24.2 (2P) class="Chemical">p.class="Chemical">p.m.; Supclass="Chemical">plementary Figs 16–20). The addition of 5 eq. (versus
2A) of pan class="Chemical">water to the solution results in a mixture comprising a
relative molar ratio 2A:3A=2:3. Solvated water is also
observed in the NMR spectrum, suggesting equilibration between 2A, water
and 3A (Fig. 3). It is important to emphasize that
3A reproducibly forms on addition of water to chloroform, toluene or
tetrahydrofuran (THF) solutions of 2A.
The formula of 3A is
[class="Chemical">Zn6(μ2-OH)3(pan class="Chemical">DPPA)9],
established by XRD analysis of single crystals (Fig. 3b
and Supplementary Fig. 18). Solid
3A can also be isolated in quantitative yield by direct reaction, in
this case of a 1:1.5:0.75 ratio of ZnEt2:DPPA-H:water. The product
has a pseudo trigonal prismatic shape, previously unknown for such zinc
clusters. It also features three bridging zinc hydroxide ligands. The trigonal
prismatic shape results from two planar triangular units of
Zn3(DPPA)3, which are bridged by three further DPPA
units and three hydroxides. In all cases, P–O bond lengths are similar,
suggesting delocalized bonding.
The stability of the cluster may stem from the class="Chemical">hydroxide groups being class="Chemical">positioned
just far enough from each other to hinder any further condensation reactions
(Supclass="Chemical">plementary Fig. 21).
Attenuated total reflection–infrared spectroscopy of a crystalline sample
of 3A (dried under vapan class="Chemical">cuum) shows a weak signal at
3,644 cm−1 attributed to O–H stretches
(not present for 2A), consistent with values reported for other bridging
Zn2(μ2-OH) units; a second broad signal at
3,410 cm−1 could be a different OH stretching
mode or traces of adsorbed moisture (Supplementary Fig. 18)46474849. The
1H NMR spectrum of 3A shows three sets of phenyl
environments in a 1:1:1 ratio, which are assigned using correlation spectroscopy
NMR (Supplementary Fig. 17). The
solution structure is consistent with the solid-state structure, assuming that
there is some flexibility enabling a D3H symmetry in solution. The
six ‘planar' DPPA units are assigned to two phenyl environments: one
pointing approximately in the plane of the triangle and the other perpendicular.
The third phenyl environment is attributed to the three ‘bridging'
DPPA units in which both phenyl groups occupy identical environments. The
hydroxide protons are also observable as a sharp signal at 3.67 p.p.m.,
with a relative integral of 3H.
The formation of 3A is unexpected; the isolation and characterization of
well-defined class="Chemical">Zn-hydroxide complexes is usually challenging, often requiring the
use of bulky, multi-dentate ligands for stabilization4649.
Zinc-hydroxy species are of interest in a range of contexts, including as
class="Chemical">putative intermediates during pan class="Chemical">ZnO nanoparticle synthesis and as models for a
range of zinc-dependent metalloenzymes114546475051525354.
Given interest in similar class="Chemical">carboxylate-ligated pan class="Chemical">Zn clusters, the different
structures and reactivity observed here with phosphinate ligands is notable. The
solid-state structure of 2B shows Zn−phosphinate bond lengths
ranging from 1.917(2) to 1.960(2) Å, with an average
(1.936(2) Å) slightly greater than that of the analogous
Zn-benzoate structure Zn4O(O2CPh)6
(average=1.926 Å)35, in line with
slightly weaker bonding from the phosphinate. The
Zn−(μ4-O) bonds in 2B are also lengthened
(average 2B, 1.989(2) Å;
Zn4O(O2CPh)6 1.946 Å),
presumably as a result of the larger size of the phosphinate chelate compared
with a carboxylate (average P−O (2B), 1.512(2) Å;
average C−O (Zn4O(O2CPh)6),
1.258 Å)35, which allows for an expansion of the
Zn4O cluster. Compounds 2A/B react with water to form
well-defined zinc hydroxide complexes, whereas the carboxyate analogue
[Zn4O(CO2Ph)6] reacts as a Lewis
acid towards water to form an aqua complex
[Zn4(μ4-O)(OOCPh)6(H2O)(THF)]31. Thus, complexes with phosphinate ligands undergo disruption of
the Zn4O core. The Zn−OH bonds in 3A are shorter on
average (1.935(2) Å) than the Zn−(μ4-O)
bonds in 2B (1.989(2) Å); it may be that owing to the larger
size of the phosphinate ligand, effective bonding to the oxo/hydroxo ligand is
favoured in the expanded Zn6 structure.
Equilibrium studies
To explore the factors controlling the equilibration of zinc-class="Chemical">oxo and zinc-hydroxy
clusters, variable-temperature NMR spectroscopy was apclass="Chemical">plied, using a solution
containing a starting 2:3 ratio of 2A:3A, over the temperature
range 288–328 K (Supclass="Chemical">plementary Fig. 24). At each temperature, the equilibrium was
rapidly established, as confirmed by an identical second spectrum, obtained
after ∼15 min. The ratio of 2A:3A is easily determined
from the pan class="Chemical">31P{1H} NMR spectra (see Supplementary Methods), with 2A being
the major species at temperatures above 318 K. Under the experimental
conditions, the concentration of water is low (0.059 M) but is all fully
dissolved with no downfield signal, which would be expected from separated water
droplets. Van't Hoff analysis showed that
ΔHr=−108±3 kJ mol−1
and
ΔSr=−238±9 J K−1 mol−1
(Supplementary Fig. 25 and
Supplementary Methods).
Clearly, the hydroxo structure 3A is enthalpically favoured, but the
entropic advantage results in 2A becoming dominant at higher
temperatures. A similar equilibrium exists between zinc-oxo cluster 2B,
water and 3B (Supplementary Figs
22 and 23). The equilibrium lies more towards the zinc oxo species,
2B, than in the 2A/3A system
(2B/3B=1:0.23 cf.
2A:2B=1:0.9, 2.3 eq. water added). Van't Hoff
analysis revealed that
ΔHr=−97±3 kJ mol−1
and
ΔSr=−234±9 J K−1 mol−1
(Supplementary Fig. 26 and
Supplementary Table 1).
Compared with 2A/3A, the entropy of reaction is unchanged (within
error), but the zinc hydroxyl cluster, 3B, is slightly less enthalpically
favoured (Supplementary Table 1).
These results provide a thermodynamic rationale for the equilibration between
the clusters and demonstrate the importance of the phosphinate ligand in
controlling the relative stabilities of the clusters.
Synthesis of a zinc-boroxine cluster
The proximity of the three hydroxyl groups in 3A suggests the intriguing
possibility of coordiclass="Gene">nation of further atoms/molepan class="Chemical">cules in the centre of the
cluster (O−centroid distances 1.5–1.8 Å, Supplementary Fig. 21). In a different
system and geometry, partially condensed trisilanol silsequioxanes have been
widely used to bind heteroatoms for catalytic and other studies55. The reactivity of 3A with organometallic reagents (such as
AlEt3) is challenging, especially given the presence of water in
the solution equilibrium, which results in preferential hydrolysis of the
organometallic species, driving the equilibrium back towards 2A. An
alternative approach is to use a different oxygen source to form the
Zn–O–X moieties. In this regard, boric acid (B(OH)3) is
attractive for its aqueous stability and trigonal planar shape. Boric acid
clearly reacts with a THF solution of 2A/3A, leading to the
formation of a product 4A (Supplementary Figs 27–29). Compound 4A can also be
prepared in quantitative yield (31P NMR) by the direct reaction
of a 2:3:1 ratio of ZnEt2, DPPA-H and boric acid, in THF (Fig. 4). Again, an equilibrium exists between 4A,
2A and 3A (Supplementary Fig. 33); when 17 eq. of water was added to a solution
of pure 4A, a molar ratio of 89:7:4 for 4A:2A:3A
formed, showing that 4A is favoured even under wet conditions. Crystals
of 4A, grown from THF/hexane, showed the structure as
[Zn6B3O3(DPPA)9]
(Fig. 4b and Supplementary Figs 30 and 32). The planar cluster contains six zinc
atoms surrounding a B3O3 core. Each zinc atom is
tetrahedrally coordinated to three bridging phosphinate ligands and a
μ3-oxo ligand. The oxo ligands are each also coordinated
to the boroxine core. Two phenyl substituents align above and below this
boroxine core, suggesting some π–π stacking exists in the solid
state, it is well known that boroxines exhibit partial aromaticity56. The structure of 4A is quite different to that of
2A or 3A and it is proposed that the spontaneous self-assembly
is driven by the planar boroxine core. The
Zn6B3O3 cluster planarity may also be
relevant for the construction of more complex two-dimensional materials,
including MOFs. The structure of 4A is maintained in solution; two
singlet signals in the 31P NMR spectrum are observed in a 2:1
ratio (22.7, 29.3 p.p.m.) as expected from the two environments (in and
out of the plane) in the solid-state structure (Supplementary Fig. 27). The
1H NMR spectrum shows three sets of phenyl resonances in a 1:1:1
ratio (Supplementary Fig. 28).
Figure 4
Synthetic path and solid-state structures of 4A and 5A.
Schemes showing synthesis of (a) 4A and (c) 5A.
Solid-state structures of (b) 4A and (d) 5A (2
views shown) (views of the Zn cluster core structures, with the phenyl/ethyl
groups omitted, are provided inside the coloured circles).
Synthesis of a partially hydrolysed Zn11 cluster
It is of interest to consider what role clusters such as 1–3 might
take during the formation of class="Chemical">phosphinate-coordipan class="Gene">nated zinc oxide nanoparticles by
hydrolysis routes. We have previously reported the potential to introduce
sub-stoichiometric quantities of carboxylic acid/phosphinic acid during
ZnEt2 hydrolysis, to deliver surface-ligated crystalline ZnO
nanoparticles with well-defined sizes (2–4 nm). The capped
nanoparticles show good solubility in organic solvents and have been used as
quasi-homogeneous catalysts as well as in the preparation of high-loading
fraction ZnO-polymer composites1920. In general, there is
significant interest in the preparation of ZnO nanoparticles by the controlled
hydrolysis of organozinc reagents, including ZnEt2, as it provides a
room-temperature method to crystalline nanoparticles and a route to useful
inorganic hybrid materials10121657. So far, however, the
mechanism and intermediates implicated in the hydrolysis of well-defined
organometallic reagents, with or without capping ligands, to nanoparticles is
not at all well understood19. As a starting point to
understanding how the particles form, we proposed that there may be some partly
hydrolysed clusters present. The hydrolysis reaction occurs in solutions, often
of inert organic solvents; thus, it is beneficial to apply solution-based
spectroscopic techniques. A particular benefit of phosphinate ligands, as noted
above, is the facility to apply 31P{1H} NMR
spectroscopy. Previous studies of ZnO nanoparticles have shown they approach
surface saturation with ligand, when a mixture of 5 eq. of ZnEt2 with
one equivalent of ligand (typically dioctylphosphinic acid) is hydrolysed20. Introducing the water gradually allows the speciation during
this process to be probed. Using DPPA as a model ligand and adding only one
equivalent of water to this 5:1 mixture, a new phosphorus-containing cluster
compound was identified by NMR spectroscopy (Supplementary Figs 34–36). By
adjusting the ratios to favour this new species, we were able to form crystals
from an 11:4:4 mixture of ZnEt2, H2O and DPPA-H. The
isolated crystals revealed a cluster containing 11 zinc atoms,
[Zn11Et10O4(DPPA)4];
elemental analysis was also in good agreement (Fig. 4d and
Supplementary Fig. 37).
Compound 5A,
[Zn11Et10O4(DPPA)4],
can be thought of as an extension of 1A in which 6 extra Zn−Et
groups are added along with a central ZnO4tetrahedron. Unlike
1A, the bonding within the phosphinate ligand is now delocalized with
equivalent P−O bonds throughout. Compound 5A has approximate
D2d point symmetry, with eight Zn−Et groups coordinated by
bridging phosphinate ligands surrounding a central ZnO4tetrahedron.
A further two Zn−Et groups are located above and below the central
ZnO4 core, without any bonds to phosphinate ligands; these two
zinc atoms are three coordinate (trigonal planar). The phosphinate–Zn
bonds are somewhat variable (1.870(2)–2.094(2) Å; cf.
2B, 1.917(2)–1.960(2) Å), suggesting the central
core dictates the geometry. In solution, the 1H NMR spectrum
indicates a similar structure, with two different zinc-coordinated ethyl
environments in a 4:1 ratio (Supplementary Fig. 35). The two ethyl ligands at the three coordinate
zinc centres are significantly shifted (–1.48, 0.23 p.p.m.)
presumably due to proximity to electron-deficient zinc centres (Supplementary Fig. 36). The other zinc ethyl
ligands show diastereotopic methylene proton signals, due to chirality at those
zinc centres.
To understand the cluster interconversions, 15 eq. of class="Chemical">ZnEt2 were added
to 4 eq. of 2A, leading to a 5:1 ratio of 1A:5A, together
with residual 2A and pan class="Chemical">ZnEt2. Increasing the temperature drives
the backward reaction and increases the relative proportions of 2A and
ZnEt2, indicating that an equilibrium exists between the four
species (Fig. 5 and Supplementary Figs 38–43).
Establishing the same equilibrium from 2B also revealed a 5:1 ratio of
new clusters (that is, the analogues 1B and 5B; Supplementary Figs 40 and 41, and Supplementary Table 2),
highlighting the generality of these reactions with different phosphinate
ligands. Furthermore, all the room-temperature 1H NMR spectra of
3A, 3B and 4A show broadening of the phenyl
environments for the phosphinates in asymmetrical environments, indicating that
ligand rotation allows exchange between phenyl environments. This rotation may
suggest that the flexible ligand coordination of phosphinate ligands enable
rearrangements to the thermodynamic products.
Figure 5
Cluster equilibrium.
Equilibrium between 2, 1 and 5. Complexes 1B,
5B, 1C and 5C identified by NMR spectroscopy
only.
In situ identification of clusters in nanoparticle
synthesis
Having established the structures of clusters 1–5A and the
generality to other related model ligands, their roles in class="Chemical">ZnO nanoparticle
synthesis was explored. In class="Chemical">partipan class="Chemical">cular, the hydrolysis of ZnEt2 was
performed in the presence of the di-octylphosphinate (DOPA) ligands, which are
representative of systems used to sterically stabilize nanoparticles. The long
alkyl chains hinder crystallization, but the utility of the 31P
NMR handle allows characterization. Using analogous procedures to the
preparation of 1A/B and 2A/B, the clusters 1C
(Zn4Et4(DOPA)4) and 2C
(Zn4O(DOPA)6) were easily identified following the
reactions of appropriate ratios of ZnEt2 with DOPA-H (and water for
2C) (Supplementary Figs
44–48). Addition of an excess of water (∼6 eq.) to 2C
leads to two 31P signals (which sum to 1% of the total
integral considering residual 2C) indicative of the formation of
3C (Zn6(OH)3(DOPA)9) (Supplementary Fig. 49). However, in this
case, the equilibrium strongly favours 2C, likely to be due to the
greater steric hindrance from the bulky ligand. Nevertheless, the speciation
using the long-chain phosphinate maps onto the model clusters already
structurally characterized.
For the synthesis of functionalized nanoparticles, a Young's tap NMR tube
was loaded with a 5:1 ratio of class="Chemical">ZnEt2 and pan class="Chemical">DOPA-H solvated in
d8-toluene, similar to conditions established previously20. Water was added in sequential 0.5 μl aliquots to
the NMR tube (each aliquot making up 12.5% of the 4 μl
required for total hydrolysis) under a flow of N2. NMR spectra were
recorded at each point along the hydrolysis pathway (after ∼30 min
reaction time at each point, Supplementary Figs 50–54). An internal standard
(PPh3 in a capillary tube) was used to allow calculation of
relative integrals from the 31P{1H} NMR spectra
and to monitor the evolution of the cluster species during the reaction (Fig. 6b,c). It is worth noting that the reactions described
above were performed at stoichiometries targeted to particular clusters, whereas
the reactions on the path to nanoparticles occur in the presence of excess
diethyl zinc. Initially, in the absence of water, 1C was observed
alongside the excess ZnEt2, as expected. Initial hydrolysis of the
remaining Zn−Et bonds results in the loss of signal for 1C and the
formation of a signal at 61.0 p.p.m., assigned to complex 5C
[Zn11Et10O4(DOPA)4]
(see Supplementary Note 1),
accompanied by various low-intensity new signals. Compound 5C can be
independently synthesized and also forms an equilibrium with 1C,
2C and ZnEt2 as shown in Fig. 5
(Supplementary Figs
55–58). The other minor species (shown in Fig.
6c) are currently not assigned; the strongest signal is tracked in
Fig. 6b and disappears after 38% total
hydrolysis, leaving 5C as the dominant ligated species until hydrolysis
nears completion (Fig. 6). In the accompanying series of
1H NMR spectra (Supplementary Fig. 51), the sharp ethyl signals for 5C also
grow in and persist almost until hydrolysis is completed. The initially
exchange-broadened signals for free ZnEt2 sharpen as 1C and
other clusters are consumed and then disappear as hydrolysis proceeds. Although
the NMR spectra change little between 38 and 63% hydrolysis, a
distinctive yellow colour emerges. It appears that the extra water reacts with
ZnEt2 to produce species that are silent in the 1H
and 31P NMR spectra. This same yellow colour is observed during
hydrolysis of ZnEt2 in the absence of ligands and has been noted by
other researchers preparing ZnO nanoparticles, although the speciation remains
unexplored57. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and
powder XRD of this ‘yellow ZnO' derived from a reaction of
ZnEt2 with 0.75 eq. of H2O in toluene revealed a
mainly amorphous polydispersed and agglomerated nanoparticulate material
displaying a very broad, weak ZnO diffraction pattern (Fig.
6d and Supplementary Figs
59–61). Elemental analysis confirmed that some ethyl groups were
also maintained, although no sharp signals attributable to ethyl moieties were
observed in the 1H NMR spectra. To monitor the formation of
crystalline ZnO, the hydrolysis reaction, in the presence of DOPA ligands, was
also followed by ultraviolet spectroscopy (290–400 nm; Supplementary Fig. 62). No optical
absorption was observed in either the starting molecular precursors or
25% hydrolysed mixtures, confirming that the yellow colour is not
associated with ligated species, 1C or 5C, but rather the product
of partial ZnEt2 hydrolysis, as noted above57. At
50% hydrolysis, a strong absorption is observed, which reduces smoothly,
from 290–350 nm, but with no visible band edge typically associated
with a crystalline ZnO species; this absorption is similar but stronger at
75% hydrolysis, as consumption of ZnEt2 continues, and is
attributed to highly defective/disordered amorphous ZnO nanoparticles, as
discussed above58. However, at 100% hydrolysis, the
ultraviolet absorption drops significantly (consistent with the observed loss of
yellow colour), giving a typical ZnO band edge signal, corresponding to
nanoparticles with a diameter of ∼3 nm (Supplementary Fig 63)59.
Figure 6
In situ study of ZnO nanoparticle synthesis.
(a) Scheme showing the synthesis of ZnO nanoparticles. (b)
Relative integrals and (c) area graph showing sum of integrals from
31P{1H} NMR spectra of the P-containing
species, formed on increasing amounts of added water to an original 5:1
ZnEt2: DOPA-H mixture (*the signal for the
ZnO@DOPA nanoparticles is broad, leading to less accurate
integration). Alongside the unknown cluster displayed in b, small
quantities of other unknown species (always <10% total integral)
were also observed between 0–82% hydrolysis (shown in c and
labelled by their 31P NMR signal (Supplementary Figs 50–53 for
spectra and Supplementary Fig.
54 for %Zn speciation plots)). Area graph (c) shows
that the sum of relative integrals remains close to 100% of the
initial spectrum (1C only species) throughout the reaction.
(d,e) Representative scanning TEM (STEM) images (in
annular dark field mode) of the partially hydrolysed ZnEt2
(ZnO@Et yellow phase) and fully hydrolysed ZnO@DOPA
nanoparticles at the same level of magnification (scale bar, 10 nm;
note, Zn-containing phase appears pale on a dark background).
The final product of hydrolysis is colourless class="Chemical">ZnO nanoparticles
(2–3 nm) capclass="Chemical">ped by di(octylpan class="Chemical">phosphinate) ligands (ZnO@DOPA),
extensively characterized previously (and here shown in Fig.
6e and Supplementary Figs
64–72), showing well-isolated crystalline ZnO cores in TEM (Supplementary Fig. 64), clear XRD
features of WurtziteZnO (Supplementary
Fig. 69), an identifiable organic content in elemental analysis, and
maintaining a high solubility in toluene (unlike the hydrolysis product in the
absence of phosphinate)20. Both NMR and ultraviolet spectroscopy
studies indicate that the ligand-capped ZnO@DOPA nanoparticles only form
towards the end of the hydrolysis reaction (Fig. 6 and
Supplementary Fig. 62). The
nanoparticles are observed by 31P NMR spectroscopy as a broad
signal after 75% hydrolysis (52 p.p.m. (full width at half maximum
∼1,800 Hz)); the signal breadth is typical for ligands coordinated to
nanoparticle surfaces (Supplementary
Figs 66 and 67)17. After all the Zn−Et bonds are
hydrolysed, a second new species (2C) is observed along with the
nanoparticles in the 31P NMR spectra (Fig.
6b,c). Although the majority of phosphinate is bound to
nanoparticles, the zinc oxo cluster 2C forms as a significant byproduct
(25% of total ligand). The presence of 2C, which has a high
DOPA:Zn ratio, is consistent with the liberation of DOPA on the final hydrolysis
of 5C and agglomeration of ZnO units (note: 3C was not observed
here as it only forms as a very minor equilibrium partner with 2C in the
presence of excess moisture). Compound 2C is soluble in acetone, unlike
ZnO@DOPA nanoparticles, and thus can be easily removed, allowing the
isolation of pure nanoparticles. It is notable also that Chaudret and
colleagues16, and Mayer and colleagues7 have
recently both reported that amine-ligated zinc oxide surfaces also exhibit
exchange between coordinated and ‘free' ligands; it is interesting
to consider whether well-defined molecular zinc cluster complexes may also be
present in these cases. However, low temperature and diffusion-ordered NMR
spectroscopy studies (Supplementary Figs
66–68) showed no evidence of ligand exchange between the
nanoparticles and 2C.
This reaction trajectory is quite unexpected. The highly moisture sensitive
class="Chemical">alkyl–zinc complex 5C forms rapidly and is maintained throughout
the majority of the hydrolysis reaction, sequestering essentially all the
available ligand, whereas residual pan class="Chemical">ZnEt2 is consumed to form
unligated ZnO nanoparticle precursors. A 50% hydrolysed mixture was
monitored and found to be unchanged after 15 h, indicating that the
system is in thermodynamic equilibrium, with 93% of the total phosphinate
supply incorporated in the form of a stable cluster (minor unidentified species
make up the balance to ∼100% relative to the internal standard; Fig. 6c and Supplementary Figs 52 and 53). It is only near-full hydrolysis of all
other Zn−Et species that 5C reacts with the ‘yellow'
ZnO precursors to form the phosphinate capped ZnO nanoparticles. Unlike previous
reports in the literature, proposing cluster compounds as molecular building
blocks that directly map onto the final nanoparticle (NP) crystal structure60, here the cluster compounds do not obviously relate to Wurtzite
and instead appear to act only as a reservoir of ligand. This fresh insight into
ligand behaviour during nanoparticle synthesis has implications for the concepts
of nanoparticle growth and stabilization.
The formation of class="Chemical">ZnO nanoparticles by hydrolysis, under the same conditions, but
in the absence of any ligand class="Chemical">produces insoluble nanoparticles, with average
class="Chemical">particle sizes of ∼3.5 nm (by XRD; Supclass="Chemical">plementary Fig. 73). The similarity in
size range to the class="Chemical">particles class="Chemical">prepared using the pan class="Chemical">DOPA ligands (2–3 nm
by XRD) indicates that the ligand is not critical for particle size control, in
keeping with the distribution of ligands only at the end of the reaction.
Previous studies using carboxylate ligands and a similar synthetic protocol also
found that ZnO particles were consistently formed within the 3–5 nm
size range, regardless of the nature or loading of the ligand applied12. Nonetheless, the ligands are important to produce
well-dispersed and soluble nanoparticles, as they prevent aggregation observed
in their absence. Furthermore, ligands are likely to have a significant impact
on subsequent ripening and ageing of the nanoparticles1219.
Discussion
This study exploits an organometallic route to nanoparticles that delivers only the
stoichiometric quantity of ligand. By avoiding the excess uncoordipan class="Gene">nated ligand used
in many liquid-phase nanoparticle syntheses, the fate of the ligand at various
stages of the reaction can be directly determined. Nanoparticle nucleation is very
often considered to be a non-equilibrium process, requiring high degrees of
super-saturation and high concentrations of active surfactants to minimize the size
of the critical nuclei, with particle size often controlled by kinetics, requiring
hot injection, fast mixing and the like61. Alternatively, sol-gel
approaches often involve irreversible condensation reactions20. The
presence of ligands during nanoparticle synthesis is usually assumed to reduce the
nucleation barrier and critical nucleus size, by reducing surface energy of the
nascent nanoparticle. Smaller particles can therefore form, which are sterically
stabilized against coalescence by the coordinated ligand626364.
Here, this model is completely subverted as the ligands are observed to only
interact at the end of the reaction. The behaviour found in this ZnO system may well
be observed in other cases, where ligand supply is limited6566, or
in systems with analogous structures, such as (Zn, Cd) (S, Se, Te) capped by
coordinating ligands (carboxylates, phosphinates or phosphonates).
This study shows that equilibrium cluster interconversions, including of class="Chemical">oxo-bridged
species, can class="Chemical">play a key role in the distribution of ligand on growing nanoparticles.
Understanding the mechanisms by which the nanoparticle core is formed and then
decorated by ligands is likely to help in the formation of (surface) doped
nanoparticles crucial for many apclass="Chemical">plications16768, especially in
(opto)electronics, and in forming mixed ligand layers, which may allow unusual
wettability or adaptive behaviour6970.
In conclusion, the reactions between class="Chemical">diethyl zinc, pan class="Chemical">phosphinic acids and water lead to
a rich variety of new clusters. Using equimolar diethyl zinc and phosphinic acid
yields an organometallic cubic structure, 1; the species is hydrolysed, by
water to a Zn4O cluster, 2. The Zn4O cluster
equilibrates with excess water to produce hexa-zinc tris(hydroxide) trigonal
prismatic complexes, 3. The equilibrium is very unusual, yet provides a
simple means to prepare zinc hydroxide clusters; such species are usually
significantly more challenging to prepare, yet are important structures in
bio-inorganic and other processes. A new planar Zn6B3 cluster,
4A, is formed with B(OH)3 taking the role of the water in the
‘hydrolysis' of the Zn–Et bonds. Finally, 5A, a cluster
containing 11 zinc atoms, was prepared by partial hydrolysis of Zn–Et bonds.
Its analogue, coordinated by a long-chain di(octyl phosphinate) ligand, 5C
plays a crucial role in the synthesis of ZnO@DOPA nanoparticles.
Interestingly the reactive cluster is retained as a spectator after its formation
during the initial hydrolysis, sequestering all the available DOPA ligand in a
stable form, leaving water to react directly with residual unligated ethyl-zinc
species. Only on approaching total hydrolysis of all zinc alkyl functionalities is
the ligand delivered to the growing nanoparticle surface. The final re-equilibration
step converts disordered polydispersed nanoparticle precursors into the well-defined
ligand-capped ZnO product.
In addition to the rich cluster chemistry identified, using simple, commercial
reagents, relevant as single-source preclass="Chemical">cursors to class="Chemical">prepare (optionally doped)
nanomaterials or as nodes in new families of pan class="Chemical">metal-organic frameworks, this study
highlights a number of useful principles. First, phosphinates are under-utilized
ligands, which provide a diagnostic 31P NMR handle; a strong and
distinct NMR signal from the binding group is extremely helpful for navigating
complex mixtures to identify the correct stoichiometries for pure products. Second,
the cluster species form through a series of reversible equilibria as hydrolysis
proceeds, but specific products can be isolated directly once their composition is
identified. These equilibrium processes should allow further investigation and
interpretation of the nucleation and growth of nanoparticles.
Methods
Experimental details
All manipulations were undertaken using a class="Chemical">nitrogen filled glovebox or using a
Schlenk line, unless otherwise stated. pan class="Chemical">DPPA and bis(4-methoxyphenyl) phosphinic
acid were used directly from suppliers and di-octylphosphinic acid was prepared
using an established literature route71. ZnO@DOPA
nanoparticles were prepared using a literature route20, and
synthetic details and characterization of ZnO@DOPA, ZnO and ‘yellow
ZnO' are included in the Supplementary Methods. ZnEt2 is pyrophoric (caution!)
and was added to samples in a nitrogen-filled glovebox. As a liquid, all
additions of ZnEt2 were transferred by syringe (measured by negative
weight of donor flask). THF was dried by refluxing over sodium and benzophenone,
and stored under nitrogen. Hexane and toluene were pre-dried over potassium
hydroxide and then further dried by refluxing over sodium (benzophenone, for
hexane) and stored under nitrogen. ‘Extra-dry' acetone was purchased
from Acros Organics. All dry solvents and reagents were degassed by three
freeze–pump–thaw cycles and stored under nitrogen. Solvents were
tested for moisture content by Karl Fischer Titration (Mettler Toledo): toluene,
3.8 p.p.m.; THF, 4.1 p.p.m.; dichloromethane,
1.7 p.p.m.
NMR spectra were recorded on Bruker AV-400 or AV-500 instruments and all chemical
shifts reported in p.p.m. Solid-state Fourier transform infrared spectra were
recorded using a Perkin-Elmer Spectrum 100 FT-IR spectrometer with a Universal
ATR Sampling Accessory. Ultraviolet spectroscopy was recorded using a
PerkinElmer Lambda 950 spectrophotometer, from class="Chemical">toluene solutions. All mass
spectrometry measurements were class="Chemical">performed using a MALDI micro MX micromass
instrument. Isotope class="Chemical">patterns were compared with class="Chemical">predicted class="Chemical">patterns using mMass.
Elemental Analysis was determined by Stephen Boyer at London Metropolitan
University. Thermo-gravimetric analysis was undertaken under an air atmosphere,
using a Mettler/Toledo pan class="Gene">TGA/DSC 1LF/UMX instrument at a heating rate of
10 K min−1. Powder XRD was performed
using an X'Pert Pro diffractometer (PANalytical B. V., The Netherlands)
and X'Pert Data Collector software, version 2.2b. The instrument was used
in the theta/theta reflection mode, fitted with a nickel filter, 0.04 rad
Soller slit, 10 mm mask, 1/4° fixed divergence slit and 1/2°
fixed antiscatter slit. The diffraction patterns were analysed using Fityk
(version 0.9.0; Marcin Wojdyr, 2010), the peaks were fitted to a SplitPearson7
function and the particle size was calculated using the fitted full-width
half-maximum using the Scherrer equation. Scanning TEM images, conventional TEM
images and electron diffraction patterns were acquired on an FEI Titan
80–300 microscope operated at 300 kV. For air-sensitive samples,
the sample solution was deposited on a 400-mesh copper holey carbon grid with an
ultra-thin 3 nm-thick carbon support (Agar Scientific AGS187-4), while in
a glove box. The grid was then loaded into a Gatan environmental holder to
prevent any exposure to air prior to TEM imaging. Further details of Van't
Hoff analysis, NMR equilibrium studies, in situ experiments and single
crystal XRD are included in the Supplementary Methods and supplementary Table 3.
Syntheses and characterization of 1A
class="Chemical">Zn4Et4(DPPA)4: pan class="Chemical">DPPA-H (88.3 mg,
0.405 mmol) was placed in a Young's tap flask and dissolved in
CH2Cl2 (∼3 ml). To this, ZnEt2
(50 mg, 0.405 mmol) was added and the evolution of ethane gas was
observed. Hexane was layered onto the solution, allowing the growth of white
crystalline 1A over several days (Isolated yield: 35 mg,
23%). Alternatively, toluene can be used as the reaction solvent and
1A precipitates out directly as a powder in this case (42%
yield). Compound 1A is highly moisture sensitive and traces of 2A
can be observed in its NMR spectra if there is any contamination by trace
moisture. P{H} NMR
(162 MHz, CDCl3): δ 23.2 (s, 4P) p.p.m.;
H NMR (400 MHz, CDCl3):
δ 0.41 (q, CH2,
JHH=8 Hz, 8H), 1.33 (t, CH3,
JHH=8 Hz, 12H), 7.08 (td, DPPA,
JHH=8 Hz, 3 Hz, 16H), 7.26 (m,
DPPA, 8H), 7.34 (m, DPPA, 16H); anal. calcd for:
Zn4P4O8C56H60=C,
53.96; H, 4.85%; found C, 53.82; H, 4.76%.
Syntheses and characterization of 1C
class="Chemical">Zn4Et4(DOPA)4: 47 mg (0.162 mmol)
pan class="Chemical">dioctylphosphinic acid was placed in a Young's cap NMR tube and dissolved
in CDCl3 (0.5 ml). To this, 20 mg (0.162 mmol)
of ZnEt2 was added and the evolution of ethane gas was observed. The
product was analysed by NMR spectroscopy directly and 1C was identified
as ∼68% of 31P NMR signal with the remainder as broad
unidentified products. If an excess of ZnEt2 is present, 1C
forms as the sole 31P-containing species.
P{H} NMR
(162 MHz, CDCl3): δ 50.9 (s, 4P);
H NMR (400 MHz, CDCl3):
δ 0.03 (q, Et CH2,
JHH=8 Hz, 8H), 0.91 (t, DOPA
CH3, JHH=7 Hz, 24H), 1.14
(t, Et CH3, JHH=8 Hz,
12H), 1.30 (br, DOPA CH2, 80H), 1.53 (br, DOPA β-CH2,
16H), 1.68 (m, DOPA α-CH2, 16H) (400 MHz,
d8-toluene): δ 0.62 (q, Et CH2,
JHH=8 Hz, 8H), 0.91 (t, DOPA
CH3, JHH=7 Hz, 24H), 1.31 (br,
DOPA CH2, 80H), 1.66 (t, Et CH3,
JHH=8 Hz, 12H), 1.8 (br, DOPA
β-CH2, 16H), 1.9 (m, DOPA α-CH2,
16H)
Syntheses and characterization of 2A
class="Chemical">Zn4(μ4-O)(pan class="Chemical">DPPA)6: DPPA-H (265 mg,
1.21 mmol) was placed in a Schlenk flask with a stirrer bar and suspended
in toluene (∼15 ml). To this, ZnEt2 (100 mg,
0.81 mmol) was added and the evolution of ethane gas was observed. The
solution was stirred for 30 min, before addition of a
3.6 μl (0.2 mmol) of water by Eppendorf pipette, under a
flow of nitrogen, and the mixture stirred overnight. A precipitate formed from
the reaction solution; gentle heating allowed re-solvation of this material and
then the flask was allowed to stand at room temperature, to allow the formation
of a colourless crystalline material (isolated yield=264 mg,
83%). Alternatively, 2A can be synthesized using
CH2Cl2 as the reaction solvent and crystals can then
be formed by layering the solution with hexane. It is notable that if there is
any excess of water then traces of 3A are observable.
P{H} NMR
(162 MHz, CDCl3): δ 32.9 (s,
6P) p.p.m.; H NMR (400 MHz,
CDCl3): δ 7.08 (td, DPPA,
JHH=8 Hz and 3 Hz, 24H), 7.31 (m,
DPPA, 12H), 7.51 (m, DPPA, 24H) p.p.m.; m/z
(MALDI–ToF, matrix=9-nitroanthracene,
solvent=CHCl3): 1363.2
{[Zn4O(DPPA)5]+ calcd
1362.9}, 1619.3
{[Zn4O(DPPA)6.K]+ calcd
1618.9} amu; anal calcd for
Zn4P6O13C72H60=C,
54.71; H, 3.83%; found C, 54.33; H, 4.23% (note: traces of
CH2Cl2 and hexane were observed by NMR spectroscopy
when these crystals were solvated even after thorough drying under vacuum).
Syntheses and characterization of 2B
class="Chemical">Zn4(μ4-O)(DMeOPPA)6:
pan class="Chemical">Bis(4-methoxyphenyl)-phosphinic acid (337.9 mg, 1.21 mmol) was
placed in a Schlenk flask with a stirrer bar and dissolved in
CH2Cl2 (20 ml). To this, ZnEt2
(100 mg, 0.81 mmol) was added and the evolution of ethane gas was
observed. The solution was stirred for 30 min, before addition of a
solution of water (4 μl, 0.22 mmol) in dry acetone
(0.1 ml). The volume of solvent was reduced to ∼7 ml, by
vacuum, before layering the solution with hexane (∼40 ml), to allow
the formation of crystals (isolated yield=210 mg, 80%).
Alternatively, 2B was synthesized in toluene solvent and crystals formed
directly from the reaction medium. This product, which crystallizes with two
molecules of toluene, was rather insoluble once formed.
P{H} NMR
(162 MHz, CDCl3): δ 32.8 (s,
6P) p.p.m.; H NMR (400 MHz,
CDCl3): δ 3.75 (s, OMe, 36H), 6.58 (m,
C6H4OMe, 24H), 7.47 (m,
C6H4OMe, 24H) p.p.m.; m/z
(MALDI–ToF, matrix=9-nitroanthracene,
solvent=CHCl3): 1663.4,
{[Zn4O(DMeOPPA)5]+
calcd 1663.0} amu.; anal. calcd for
Zn4P6O25C84H84=C,
51.98; H, 4.36%; found C, 51.84; H, 4.43%; anal. calcd for
(product isolated from toluene)
Zn4P6O25C84H84.2(C7H8)=C,
55.39; H, 4.74%; found C, 55.24; H, 4.98%.
Syntheses and characterization of 2C
class="Chemical">Zn4(μ4-O)(pan class="Chemical">DOPA)6: (529 mg,
1.82 mmol) dioctylphosphinic acid was placed in a Schlenk flask with a
stirrer bar and dissolved in toluene (∼12 ml). To this, 150 mg
(1.21 mmol) of ZnEt2 was added and the evolution of ethane gas
was observed. The solution was stirred for 30 min before addition of a
solution of water in acetone (6 μl (0.33 mmol) water in
0.2 ml acetone). The solvent may be removed to leave an oily colourless
product. P{H} NMR
(162 MHz, CDCl3): δ 56.5 (s,
6P);H NMR (400 MHz,
CDCl3): δ 0.87 (t, DOPA CH3,
JHH=7 Hz, 18H), 1.25 (br, DOPA
CH2, 60H), 1.57 (br, DOPA α and β CH2,
24H); m/z (MALDI–ToF,
matrix=trans-2-[3-(4-tert-butylphenyl)-2-methyl-2-properylidene]
malononitrile, solvent=toluene): 1724.2
{[Zn4O(DPPA)5]+ calcd
1723.9} amu;
Syntheses and characterization of 3A
class="Chemical">Zn6(μ2-OH)3(pan class="Chemical">DPPA)9:
ZnEt2 (100 mg, 0.809 mmol) was added to a toluene
(8 ml) suspension of DPPA-H (265 mg, 1.21 mmol). After
stirring for 30 min, a slight excess of water (10 μl,
0.56 mmol) in acetone (0.1 ml) was added. The resulting solution
yielded a white precipitate, which could be isolated by removal of the solvent
by evacuation (311 mg, 96% yield), which was deemed pure by powder
XRD. Alternatively, single crystals of 3A could be grown by gently
warming the original toluene solution/suspension and then allowing it to cool to
room temperature. P{H}
NMR (162 MHz, CDCl3): δ 24.2 (s,
6P), 30.1 (s, 3P) p.p.m.; (162 MHz, d8-THF):
δ 23.7 (s, 6P), 29.2 (s, 3P) p.p.m.;
H NMR (400 MHz, 273 K,
CDCl3): δ 3.68 (s, OH, 3H), 6.57 (m,
C6H5 ‘planar (1)', 12H), 6.89 (t,
C6H5 ‘planar (1)',
JHH=7 Hz, 6H), 6.94 (m,
C6H5 ‘planar (2)', 12H), 7.20 (t,
C6H5 ‘planar (1)',
JHH=7 Hz, 6H), 7.3–7.52 (m,
C6H5 ‘bridging, planar (1) and (2)', 42H),
7.81 (dd, C6H5 ‘bridging',
JHH=7 and 12 Hz, 12H) p.p.m.; anal.
calcd for (from toluene)
Zn6P9O21C122H109.2(C7H8)=C,
56.75; H, 4.25%; found C, 56.71; H, 4.36%.
Syntheses and characterization of 3B
class="Chemical">Zn6(μ2-OH)3(DMeOPPA)9:
3B formed as the minor class="Chemical">product of an equilibrium with 2B, when
excess moisture is class="Chemical">present in a hydrophobic solvent such as pan class="Chemical">CDCl3.
For example, water (0.5 μl) was added to 2B (9 mg,
0.0046, mmol) in CDCl3 (0.5 ml).
P{H} NMR
(162 MHz, CDCl3): δ 24.8 (s, 6P), 30.6
(s, 3P) p.p.m.; H NMR
(400 MHz, CDCl3): δ 3.61 (br, OMe, 18H), 3.70
(br, OMe, 18H), 3.77 (s, OMe, 18H), 3.81 (s, OH, 3H), 6.22 (br
C6H4OMe, 12H), 6.46 (br,
C6H4OMe, 12H), 6.71 (m,
C6H4OMe, 12H), 7.33 (m,
C6H4OMe, 2 × 12H), 7.64 (m,
C6H4OMe, 12H).
Syntheses and characterization of 3C
class="Chemical">Zn6(μ2-OH)3(pan class="Chemical">DOPA)9: 3C
forms as the minor product of an equilibrium with 2C when excess moisture
is present. P{H}
NMR (162 MHz, CDCl3): δ 49.9 (s,
6P), 53.9 (s, 3P); H NMR (400 MHz,
CDCl3): δ 3.48 (s (OH), 3H), DOPA peaks
overlap with 2C.
Syntheses and characterization of 4A
class="Chemical">Zn6B3O6(pan class="Chemical">DPPA)9: DPPA-H
(265 mg, 1.21 mmol) and B(OH)3 (25 mg,
0.40 mmol) were placed in a Young's flask with a stirrer bar. To
this, THF (10 ml) was added and ZnEt2 (100 mg,
0.81 mmol) was then added dropwise, while stirring. The solution was
stirred overnight. A small amount of white precipitate may form, which is
expected to be 3A from reaction with liberated water, the solution was
thus filtered and precipitated using hexane to yield a white powder, which was
dried under vacuum (200 mg, 60% yield). The bulk powder from rapid
precipitation appears amorphous by powder XRD but single crystals could be grown
by slow diffusion of hexane into a THF solution of 4a.
P{H} NMR
(162 MHz, CDCl3): δ 22.7 (s, 6P), 29.3
(s, 3P) p.p.m.; (162 MHz, d8-THF):
δ 22.5 (s, 6P), 29.0 (s,
3P) p.p.m.;H NMR (400 MHz,
CDCl3): δ 6.79 (br, ‘Asym' DPPA, 12H),
6.86 (br, ‘Asym' DPPA, 6H), 7.21 (br, ‘Asym' DPPA, 12H),
7.38 (m, ‘Asym and Sym' DPPA, 36H), 7.55 (m,
‘Asym' DPPA, 12H), 8.13 (m, ‘Sym' DPPA, 12H); m/z
(MALDI–ToF,
matrix=trans-2-[3-(4-tert-butylphenyl)-2-methyl-2-properylidene]
malononitrile, solvent=toluene): 2257.2,
{[Zn6O6B3(DPPA)8]+
calcd 2256.9} amu; anal. calcd for:
Zn6P9B3O18C114H102=C,
55.58; H, 4.17%; found C, 55.32; H, 3.94%.
Syntheses and characterization of 5A
class="Chemical">Zn11Et10O4(DPPA)4: pan class="Chemical">DPPA-H
(96.4 mg, 0.442 mmol) was placed in a Schlenk flask, with a
stirrer bar. To this, toluene (10 ml) was added and ZnEt2
(150 mg, 1.21 mmol) was then added dropwise, while stirring. To
this solution, water (7.95 μl, 0.442 mmol) was added, by
Eppendorf syringe, under a stream of N2. The solution was stirred
overnight, to ensure all water had been dissolved. Hexane was added and the
product isolated as crystals (isolated yield=77 mg, 36%).
P{H} NMR
(162 MHz, CDCl3): δ 33.1 (s,
4P) p.p.m.; (162 MHz, C6D6): δ
33.7 (s, 4P) p.p.m.; H NMR
(400 MHz, CDCl3): δ –1.48 (q,
CH2, JHH=8 Hz, 4H), −0.07
(dm, CH2*, 16H), 0.23 (q, CH3,
JHH=8 Hz, 6H), 1.24 (t,
CH3, JHH=8 Hz, 24H), 7.41
(m, DPPA, 8H), 7.50 (m, DPPA, 16H), 7.98 (m, DPPA,
16H) p.p.m.; anal. calcd for:
Zn11P4O12C68H90=C,
42.05; H, 4.67%; found C, 42.11; H, 4.52%. *Symmetrical
multiplet, suggesting diasterotopic Et CH2 protons. Both halves of
multiplet couple to the CH3 signal (δ 1.24) in the
1H-1H correlation spectroscopy spectrum.
Syntheses and characterization of 5C
class="Chemical">Zn11Et10O4(DOPA)4: (64.1 mg,
0.221 mmol) of pan class="Chemical">dioctylphosphinic acid was placed in a Young's tap
flask with a stirrer bar. To this, 10 ml of toluene was added and
75 mg (0.607 mmol) of ZnEt2 was then added dropwise,
while stirring. To this solution, 3.9 μl (0.217 mmol) of
water was added by Eppendorf syringe under a stream of N2. The
solution was stirred for 1 h followed by brief sonication to ensure all
water had been incorporated. The product was isolated by evacuation of the
solvent to give an air-sensitive colourless oil.
P{H} NMR
(162 MHz, CDCl3): δ 60.8 (s, 4P);
(162 MHz, d8-toluene): δ 61.1 (s, 4P)
(162 MHz, h8-toluene): δ 61.1 (s, 4P);
H NMR (400 MHz, CDCl3):
δ 0.14 (q, Et CH2,
JHH=8 Hz, 16H), 0.45 (q, Et
CH2, JHH=8 Hz, 4H), 0.89 (br,
DOPA CH3, 24H), 1.14 (t, Et CH3,
JHH=8 Hz, 24H), 1.2–1.9 (m,
DOPA CH2, 112H); (400 MHz, h8-toluene):
δ 0.72 (q, Et CH2,
JHH=8 Hz, 16H), 0.91 (t, DOPA
CH3, 24H), 0.95 (q, Et CH2,
JHH=8 Hz, 4H), 1.29–1.52 (br, DOPA
CH2, 112H), 1.67 (t, Et CH3,
JHH=8 Hz, 24H), *CH3 signal
for the minor ethyl group is not located, probably obscured.
Data availability
The data supporting the findings of this study are available within the article
and its Supplementary Information
or are available from the authors. The Crystallographic data have been deposited
with the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre under Cclass="Chemical">CDC
1432882–1432886. These data can be obtained free of charge from The
Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre via www.cpan class="Chemical">cdc.cam.ac.uk/data_request/cif. Full bond length and bond
angle data may be found in the CIFs, which are available as Supplementary Data 1–5.
Additional information
How to cite this article: class="Gene">Pike, S. D. et al. Simple pan class="Chemical">phosphinate ligands
access zinc clusters identified in the synthesis of zinc oxide nanoparticles.
Nat. Commun.
7, 13008 doi: 10.1038/ncomms13008 (2016).
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