Tailoring two magic number Au13 nanoclusters with N-containing diphosphine ligands: a classical icosahedral core vs. an unprecedented UFO- shaped core†‡
Abstract
Two magic number Au13 nanoclusters, [Au13(PNP)5Cl2]Cl3 and [Au13(Hdppa)6]Cl5, with the same nuclearity number but completely distinct configurations, were elaborately constructed using N-containing diphosphine ligands (PNP or Hdppa). Significantly, the metal core of [Au13(PNP)5Cl2]3+ is a classical Au13 icosahedron, while the [Au13(Hdppa)6]5+ core presents a “UFO”-shaped polyhedron, which is illuminated here for the first time. The “UFO”-shaped Au13 core is also unprecedented among 13-atom coinage-metal clusters. The luminescence of [Au13(PNP)5Cl2]Cl3 is at 732 nm in solution and 750 nm in the solid state, close to the near-infrared region. Moreover, the luminescence lifetimes are longer than those of reported icosahedral Au13 nanoclusters. This work demonstrates that N-functionalization of phosphine ligands is one of the effective methods for tailoring atomically precise gold clusters.
- This article is part of the themed collection: 2024 Inorganic Chemistry Frontiers HOT articles