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Giant Hollow Heterometallic Polyoxoniobates with Sodalite‐Type Lanthanide–Tungsten–Oxide Cages: Discrete Nanoclusters and Extended Frameworks
Author(s) -
Jin Lu,
Li XinXiong,
Qi YanJie,
Niu PingPing,
Zheng ShouTian
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
angewandte chemie international edition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.831
H-Index - 550
eISSN - 1521-3773
pISSN - 1433-7851
DOI - 10.1002/anie.201608113
Subject(s) - nanoclusters , sodalite , lanthanide , tungsten , type (biology) , materials science , tungsten oxide , oxide , crystallography , inorganic chemistry , nanotechnology , chemistry , metallurgy , organic chemistry , zeolite , ion , geology , catalysis , paleontology
The first series of niobium–tungsten–lanthanide (Nb‐W‐Ln) heterometallic polyoxometalates {Ln 12 W 12 O 36 (H 2 O) 24 (Nb 6 O 19 ) 12 } (Ln=Y, La, Sm, Eu, Yb) have been obtained, which are comprised of giant cluster‐in‐cluster‐like ({Ln 12 W 12 }‐in‐{Nb 72 }) structures built from 12 hexaniobate {Nb 6 O 19 } clusters gathered together by a rare 24‐nuclearity sodalite‐type heterometal–oxide cage {Ln 12 W 12 O 36 (H 2 O) 24 }. The Nb‐W‐Ln clusters present the largest multi‐metal polyoxoniobates and a series of rare high‐nuclearity 4d‐5d‐4f multicomponent clusters. Furthermore, the giant Nb‐W‐Ln clusters may be isolated as discrete inorganic alkali salts and can be used as building blocks to form high‐dimensional inorganic–organic hybrid frameworks.