Neutral tantalum−carbide clusters, Ta
m
C
n
(m = 1−6, n = 1−7), have been formed in a supersonic expansion
following the reaction of tantalum and acetylene in a laser ablation source. These clusters have been subjected
to multiphoton ionization at 532 and 355 nm and the mass spectra recorded in a reflectron time-of-flight
mass spectrometer. The cluster distributions show a drop off after m = 4 suggesting the stabilization of
clusters containing four tantalum atoms. We have investigated the structures of these clusters using density
functional theory and shown that the smaller clusters tend to form fragments of face-centered cubes, culminating
in the formation of a distorted cube of stoichiometry Ta4C4. The structure of Ta4C4 is shown to be a distorted
tetrahedron, or “butterfly”, made up of four tantalum atoms with a carbon atom bonded to each face. The
theoretical calculations also indicate that clusters containing three tantalum atoms form a triangle and that
there is competition for the carbon atoms to bond to either the face or the edge of the tantalum triangle.
The interaction of the thionucleobase 2-thiouracil with the
triethylphosphinegold(I) cation has been examined
employing ab initio molecular orbital theory. Deprotonation of
2-thiouracil (2-TUH) and subsequent association
with [Et3PAu]+ leads to the formation
of [Et3PAu(2-TU H)]; a comparison
of calculated and experimental
geometric parameters reveals a high degree of agreement. The
interaction of two [Et3PAu]+ cations
with
twice deprotonated 2-TUH indicates that the most stable dinuclear
structure is one where coordination occurs
via the sulfur and one of the nitrogen atoms leading to almost linear
P−Au−S and P−Au−N arrangements,
respectively.
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