Issue 29, 2009

Metal–metal bonds in f-element chemistry

Abstract

The molecular chemistry of the f-elements is traditionally dominated by the use of carbon-, nitrogen-, oxygen-, or halide-ligands. However, the use of metal-based fragments as ligands is underdeveloped, which contrasts to the fields of d- and p-block metal–metal complexes that have developed extensively over the last fifty years. This perspective outlines the development of compounds, which possess polarised covalent or donor–acceptor f-element–metal bonds. For this review, the f-element is defined as (i) a group 3 or lanthanide metal: scandium, yttrium, lanthanum to lutetium, or (ii) an actinide metal: thorium, or uranium, and the metal is defined as a d-block transition metal, or a group 13 (aluminium or gallium), a group 14 (silicon, germanium, or tin), or a group 15 (antimony, or bismuth) metal. Silicon, germanium, and antimony are traditionally classified as metalloids but they are included for completeness. This review focuses mainly on complexes that have been structurally authenticated by single-crystal X-ray diffraction studies and we highlight novel aspects of their syntheses, properties, and reactivities.

Graphical abstract: Metal–metal bonds in f-element chemistry

Article information

Article type
Perspective
Submitted
03 Mar 2009
Accepted
01 Apr 2009
First published
06 May 2009

Dalton Trans., 2009, 5592-5605

Metal–metal bonds in f-element chemistry

S. T. Liddle and D. P. Mills, Dalton Trans., 2009, 5592 DOI: 10.1039/B904318G

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