Abstract

Polyoxometalate clusters possess unique catalytic and electromagnetic properties. The structure and function of polyoxometalates is dictated by complex oligomerization processes, which in turn depend on the solution conditions. In this work, small gas-phase polyoxomolybdate nanoclusters (HMonO3n+11–, n = 1–8, and MonO3n+12–, n = 2–8) were investigated after nanoelectrospray of an acidified solution of ammonium heptamolybdate heptahydrate by ion mobility spectrometry–mass spectrometry (IMS–MS), infrared multiple photon dissociation (IRMPD) spectroscopy, and infrared action spectroscopy in helium nanodroplets. The spectra and collision cross sections obtained were matched to predictions from density-functional theory (DFT) to unravel the structural progression of nanoclusters with increasing size. For doubly charged clusters, transitions among chain (n = 2–3), ring (n = 4–5), and compact (n ≥ 6) structures are observed in IMS–MS and IR spectroscopy experiments, in agreement with low-energy structures from DFT calculations. For singly charged clusters, reduced Coulombic repulsion and hydrogen bonding interactions are found to strongly influence the most stable cluster structure. Notably, a noncovalent ring structure is observed for HMo3O101–, stabilized by a strong intramolecular hydrogen bond, and a compact structure is observed for HMo5O161–, in contrast to the ring structure favored for Mo5O162–.

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