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Oligonuclear Actinoid Complexes with Schiff Bases as Ligands—Older Achievements and Recent Progress

Even 155 years after their first synthesis, Schiff bases continue to surprise inorganic chemists. Schiff-base ligands have played a major role in the development of modern coordination chemistry because of their relevance to a number of interdisciplinary research fields. The chemistry, properties an...

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Autores principales: Tsantis, Sokratis T., Tzimopoulos, Demetrios I., Holynska, Malgorzata, Perlepes, Spyros P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7027032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31952278
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms21020555
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author Tsantis, Sokratis T.
Tzimopoulos, Demetrios I.
Holynska, Malgorzata
Perlepes, Spyros P.
author_facet Tsantis, Sokratis T.
Tzimopoulos, Demetrios I.
Holynska, Malgorzata
Perlepes, Spyros P.
author_sort Tsantis, Sokratis T.
collection PubMed
description Even 155 years after their first synthesis, Schiff bases continue to surprise inorganic chemists. Schiff-base ligands have played a major role in the development of modern coordination chemistry because of their relevance to a number of interdisciplinary research fields. The chemistry, properties and applications of transition metal and lanthanoid complexes with Schiff-base ligands are now quite mature. On the contrary, the coordination chemistry of Schiff bases with actinoid (5f-metal) ions is an emerging area, and impressive research discoveries have appeared in the last 10 years or so. The chemistry of actinoid ions continues to attract the intense interest of many inorganic groups around the world. Important scientific challenges are the understanding the basic chemistry associated with handling and recycling of nuclear materials; investigating the redox properties of these elements and the formation of complexes with unusual metal oxidation states; discovering materials for the recovery of trans-{U(VI)O(2)}(2+) from the oceans; elucidating and manipulating actinoid-element multiple bonds; discovering methods to carry out multi-electron reactions; and improving the 5f-metal ions’ potential for activation of small molecules. The study of 5f-metal complexes with Schiff-base ligands is a currently “hot” topic for a variety of reasons, including issues of synthetic inorganic chemistry, metalosupramolecular chemistry, homogeneous catalysis, separation strategies for nuclear fuel processing and nuclear waste management, bioinorganic and environmental chemistry, materials chemistry and theoretical chemistry. This almost-comprehensive review, covers aspects of synthetic chemistry, reactivity and the properties of dinuclear and oligonuclear actinoid complexes based on Schiff-base ligands. Our work focuses on the significant advances that have occurred since 2000, with special attention on recent developments. The review is divided into eight sections (chapters). After an introductory section describing the organization of the scientific information, Sections 2 and 3 deal with general information about Schiff bases and their coordination chemistry, and the chemistry of actinoids, respectively. Section 4 highlights the relevance of Schiff bases to actinoid chemistry. Sections 5–7 are the “main menu” of the scientific meal of this review. The discussion is arranged according the actinoid (only for Np, Th and U are Schiff-base complexes known). Sections 5 and 7 are further arranged into parts according to the oxidation states of Np and U, respectively, because the coordination chemistry of these metals is very much dependent on their oxidation state. In Section 8, some concluding comments are presented and a brief prognosis for the future is attempted.
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spelling pubmed-70270322020-03-11 Oligonuclear Actinoid Complexes with Schiff Bases as Ligands—Older Achievements and Recent Progress Tsantis, Sokratis T. Tzimopoulos, Demetrios I. Holynska, Malgorzata Perlepes, Spyros P. Int J Mol Sci Review Even 155 years after their first synthesis, Schiff bases continue to surprise inorganic chemists. Schiff-base ligands have played a major role in the development of modern coordination chemistry because of their relevance to a number of interdisciplinary research fields. The chemistry, properties and applications of transition metal and lanthanoid complexes with Schiff-base ligands are now quite mature. On the contrary, the coordination chemistry of Schiff bases with actinoid (5f-metal) ions is an emerging area, and impressive research discoveries have appeared in the last 10 years or so. The chemistry of actinoid ions continues to attract the intense interest of many inorganic groups around the world. Important scientific challenges are the understanding the basic chemistry associated with handling and recycling of nuclear materials; investigating the redox properties of these elements and the formation of complexes with unusual metal oxidation states; discovering materials for the recovery of trans-{U(VI)O(2)}(2+) from the oceans; elucidating and manipulating actinoid-element multiple bonds; discovering methods to carry out multi-electron reactions; and improving the 5f-metal ions’ potential for activation of small molecules. The study of 5f-metal complexes with Schiff-base ligands is a currently “hot” topic for a variety of reasons, including issues of synthetic inorganic chemistry, metalosupramolecular chemistry, homogeneous catalysis, separation strategies for nuclear fuel processing and nuclear waste management, bioinorganic and environmental chemistry, materials chemistry and theoretical chemistry. This almost-comprehensive review, covers aspects of synthetic chemistry, reactivity and the properties of dinuclear and oligonuclear actinoid complexes based on Schiff-base ligands. Our work focuses on the significant advances that have occurred since 2000, with special attention on recent developments. The review is divided into eight sections (chapters). After an introductory section describing the organization of the scientific information, Sections 2 and 3 deal with general information about Schiff bases and their coordination chemistry, and the chemistry of actinoids, respectively. Section 4 highlights the relevance of Schiff bases to actinoid chemistry. Sections 5–7 are the “main menu” of the scientific meal of this review. The discussion is arranged according the actinoid (only for Np, Th and U are Schiff-base complexes known). Sections 5 and 7 are further arranged into parts according to the oxidation states of Np and U, respectively, because the coordination chemistry of these metals is very much dependent on their oxidation state. In Section 8, some concluding comments are presented and a brief prognosis for the future is attempted. MDPI 2020-01-15 /pmc/articles/PMC7027032/ /pubmed/31952278 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms21020555 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Tsantis, Sokratis T.
Tzimopoulos, Demetrios I.
Holynska, Malgorzata
Perlepes, Spyros P.
Oligonuclear Actinoid Complexes with Schiff Bases as Ligands—Older Achievements and Recent Progress
title Oligonuclear Actinoid Complexes with Schiff Bases as Ligands—Older Achievements and Recent Progress
title_full Oligonuclear Actinoid Complexes with Schiff Bases as Ligands—Older Achievements and Recent Progress
title_fullStr Oligonuclear Actinoid Complexes with Schiff Bases as Ligands—Older Achievements and Recent Progress
title_full_unstemmed Oligonuclear Actinoid Complexes with Schiff Bases as Ligands—Older Achievements and Recent Progress
title_short Oligonuclear Actinoid Complexes with Schiff Bases as Ligands—Older Achievements and Recent Progress
title_sort oligonuclear actinoid complexes with schiff bases as ligands—older achievements and recent progress
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7027032/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31952278
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms21020555
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