Abstract

Complexes of dysprosium, holmium, and erbium find many applications as single-molecule magnets, as contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging, as anti-cancer agents, in optical telecommunications, etc. Therefore, the development of tools that can be proven helpful to complex design is presently an active area of research. In this article, we advance a major improvement to the semiempirical description of lanthanide complexes: the Recife Model 1, RM1, model for the lanthanides, parameterized for the trications of Dy, Ho, and Er. By representing such lanthanide in the RM1 calculation as a three-electron atom with a set of 5 d, 6 s, and 6 p semiempirical orbitals, the accuracy of the previous sparkle models, mainly concentrated on lanthanide-oxygen and lanthanide-nitrogen distances, is extended to other types of bonds in the trication complexes’ coordination polyhedra, such as lanthanide-carbon, lanthanide-chlorine, etc. This is even more important as, for example, lanthanide-carbon atom distances in the coordination polyhedra of the complexes comprise about 30% of all distances for all complexes of Dy, Ho, and Er considered. Our results indicate that the average unsigned mean error for the lanthanide-carbon distances dropped from an average of 0.30 Å, for the sparkle models, to 0.04 Å for the RM1 model for the lanthanides; for a total of 509 such distances for the set of all Dy, Ho, and Er complexes considered. A similar behavior took place for the other distances as well, such as lanthanide-chlorine, lanthanide-bromine, lanthanide, phosphorus and lanthanide-sulfur. Thus, the RM1 model for the lanthanides, being advanced in this article, broadens the range of application of semiempirical models to lanthanide complexes by including comprehensively many other types of bonds not adequately described by the previous models.

Highlights

  • Lanthanide complexes, as is well known, have a wide range of high technology applications

  • Dysprosium complexes, in particular, will be very important in the development of magnetic materials because of recent results leading to the highest relaxation energy barriers for multinuclear clusters [3,4], the highest temperature at which hysteresis has been observed for any single complex [5], and a record magnetic blocking temperature of 8.3 K at a sweep rate of 0.08 Ts-1 [6]

  • They are complementary to gadolinium complexes, which act as positive contrast agents, which brighten the image

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Summary

Introduction

Lanthanide complexes, as is well known, have a wide range of high technology applications. By moving towards other types of lanthanide-ligand atom bonds, the accuracy of the Sparkle Models starts to wane.

Results
Conclusion
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