Correlating the magic numbers of inorganic nanomolecular assemblies with a {Pd84} molecular-ring Rosetta Stone

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Abstract

Molecular self-assembly has often been suggested as the ultimate route for the bottom-up construction of building blocks atom-byatom for functional nanotechnology, yet structural design or prediction of nanomolecular assemblies is still far fromreach. Whereas nature uses complex machinery such as the ribosome, chemists use painstakingly engineered step-by-step approaches to build complex molecules but the size and complexity of such molecules, not to mention the accessible yields, can be limited. Herein we present the discovery of a palladium oxometalate {Pd84}-ring cluster 3.3 nm in diameter; [Pd84O42(OAc)28(PO4) 42]70- ({Pd84} ≡ {Pd12} 7) that is formed in water just by mixing two reagents at room temperature, giving crystals of the compound in just a few days. The structure of the {Pd84}-ring has sevenfold symmetry, comprises 196 building blocks, and we also show, using mass spectrometry, that a large library of other related nanostructures is present in solution. Finally, by analysis of the symmetry and the building block library that construct the {Pd84} we show that the correlation of the symmetry, subunit number, and overall cluster nuclearity can be used as a "Rosetta Stone" to rationalize the "magic numbers" defining a number of other systems. This is because the discovery of {Pd84} allows the relationship between seemingly unrelated families of molecular inorganic nanosystems to be decoded from the overall cluster magic-number nuclearity, to the symmetry and building blocks that define such structures allowing the prediction of other members of these nanocluster families.

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Xu, F., Miras, H. N., Scullion, R. A., Long, D. L., Thiel, J., & Cronin, L. (2012). Correlating the magic numbers of inorganic nanomolecular assemblies with a {Pd84} molecular-ring Rosetta Stone. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 109(29), 11609–11612. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1202981109

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