Carbon–sulfur bond strength in methanesulfinate and benzenesulfinate ligands directs decomposition of Np(v) and Pu(v) coordination complexes†
Abstract
Gas-phase coordination complexes of actinyl(V) cations, AnO2+, provide a basis to assess fundamental aspects of actinide chemistry. Electrospray ionization of solutions containing an actinyl cation and sulfonate anion CH3SO2− or C6H5SO2− generated complexes [(AnVO2)(CH3SO2)2]− or [(AnVO2)(C6H5SO2)2]− where An = Np or Pu. Collision induced dissociation resulted in C–S bond cleavage for methanesulfinate to yield [(AnVO2)(CH3SO2)(SO2)]−, whereas hydrolytic ligand elimination occurred for benzenesulfinate to yield [(AnVO2)(C6H5SO2)(OH)]−. These different fragmentation pathways are attributed to a stronger C6H5-SO2−versus CH3-SO2− bond, which was confirmed for both the bare and coordinating sulfinate anions by energies computed using a relativistic multireference perturbative approach (XMS-CASPT2 with spin–orbit coupling). The results demonstrate shutting off a ligand fragmentation channel by increasing the strength of a particular bond, here a sulfinate C–S bond. The [(AnVO2)(CH3SO2)(SO2)]− complexes produced by CID spontaneously react with O2 to eliminate SO2, yielding [(AnO2)(CH3SO2)(O2)]−, a process previously reported for An = U and found here for An = Np and Pu. Computations confirm that the O2/SO2 displacement reactions should be exothermic or thermoneutral for all three An, as was experimentally established. The computations furthermore reveal that the products are superoxides [(AnVO2)(CH3SO2)(O2)]− for An = Np and Pu, but peroxide [(UVIO2)(CH3SO2)(O2)]−. Distinctive reduction of O2− to O22− concomitant with oxidation of U(V) to U(VI) reflects the relatively higher stability of hexavalent uranium versus neptunium and plutonium.