Advances in the coordination chemistry of multinuclear compounds have been exploited to drive the self-assembly of many new discrete metallo-supramolecular motifs. Due to the nature of the metal-ligand interactions, many of these systems have a dynamic character with reversible association and dissociation able to generate complex mixtures. Unveil such dynamic behaviours, it is a priority to fully understand, control and design their functional properties. Among metallo-supramolecular systems, lanthanide (Ln) based architectures attracts much attention due to their remarkable optical and magnetic properties. However, design and control of the final supramolecule is very challenging due to the inner nature of the 4f orbitals and consequent small ligand-field effects. There is, however, a steady variation of the effective ionic radius (EIR) across the series, the so called “lanthanide contraction”. Although the radii difference (ΔEIR) is quite small (ca. 0.20 Å between La3+ and Lu3+ and ca. 0.02 Å between two consecutive lanthanides), it can have important chemical consequences on the nature and features of supramolecular complexes.
Recently, a group headed by Marzio Rancan of ICMATE-CNR (Italy) and collaborators from the University of Padova (Italy) and Dortmund University (Germany) have demonstrated that ΔEIR strongly affects the kinetics of Ln ions exchange between preassembled quadruple-stranded [Ln2L4]2– cages (Figure 1).

Figure 1. (a) Self-assembly of seven [Ln2L4]2− cages (Ln = La, Nd, Eu, Tb, Er, Tm and Lu). (b) Dynamic Ln3+ ion exchange equilibrium between two pre-assembled cages and (c) exponential trend of the kinetic constants depending on the Ln ΔEIR.
Corresponding author:
Marzio Rancan is a Research Fellow at ICMATE-CNR (Italy). He received his PhD in Molecular Sciences at the University of Padova in 2009. He did post-doctoral studies at CNR, University of Padova and spent one year in the Molecular Magnetism Group at The University of Manchester (UK). His current research is focused on the synthesis and characterization of coordination-driven molecular and supramolecular architectures with functional properties. He is the author of about 60 articles.
WEBSITE: http://wwwdisc.chimica.unipd.it/FMNLab/index.html
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9967-5283
RESEARCHGATE: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Marzio-Rancan