The Synthesis, Structural Characterization, and DFT Calculation of a New Binuclear Gd(III) Complex with 4-Aacetylphenoxyacetic Acid and 1,10-Phenanthroline Ligands and Its Roles in Catalytic Activity

A new binuclear Gd(III) complex, [Gd2(L)6(Phen)2]·4H2O, was synthesized via the reaction of gadolinium(III) nitrate hexahydrate, 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid (HL), NaOH, and 1,10-phenanthroline (Phen) in a solution of water–ethanol (v:v = 1:1). The Gd(III) complex was characterized using IR, UV–vis, TG-DSC, fluorescence, and single-crystal X-ray diffraction analyses. The results showed that the Gd(III) complex crystallizes in the triclinic system, space group P-1, and each Gd(III) ion was coordinated with two nitrogen atoms (N1, N2, or N1a, and N2a) from two Phen ligands and seven oxygen atoms (O1, O2, O7a, O9, O8, O8a, O10a, or O1a, O2a, O7, O8, O8a, O9a, and O10) from six L ligands, respectively, forming a nine-coordinated coordination mode. The Gd(III) complex molecules formed a one-dimensional chained and three-dimensional network structure via benzenering π-π stacking. The Hirschfeld surface analysis and the calculations of the electron density distributions of the frontier molecular orbitals of the Gd(III) complex were performed. The catalytic activities of the photocatalytic CO2 reduction and benzyl alcohol oxidation using the Gd(III) complex as a catalyst were performed. The results of the photocatalytic CO2 reduction showed that the yield and the selectivity of CO reached 41.5 μmol/g and more than 99% after four hours, respectively. The results of the benzyl alcohol oxidation showed that the yield of benzaldehyde was 45.7% at 120 °C with THF as the solvent under 0.5 MPa O2 within 2 h.


Introduction
Photocatalytic CO 2 reduction technology with metal semiconductors, boron nitride derivatives, metal sulfide and carbon-based materials as catalysts has attracted wide attention from material scientists and chemists because they can convert CO 2 into high value-added products, such as methane, CO, methanol, ethanol, and formic acid [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12].For example, the Rh/Al 2 O 3 catalyst can achieve a methane selectivity above 98% [7].The nickel-boron nitride catalyst has a high CO 2 conversion rate (87.68%), high CO 2 catalytic rate (2.03 mol gNi −1 h −1 ), high stability, and high CH 4 selectivity (99.83%) [8].Magneticfield-regulated TiO 2 can enhance the coupling of the CO* intermediates, increasing the yield rate of CO 2 to C 2 H 5 OH 22-fold higher than pristine TiO 2 [9].The CO production rate is 28.83 µmol•g −1 •h −1 with the NALDH/CN/GA-20 hybrid system as a catalyst, which is 24 and 16 times that of pure NALDH and bare CN, respectively [11].However, the above catalyst materials have disadvantages, such as expensive costs and difficulty in determining the composition.Benzaldehyde is an important organic raw chemical material that is widely used in the chemical industry, dairy products, cellulose and synthetic fiber materials, medicine, and other fields.However, benzaldehydes are prepared via benzyl alcohol oxidation with toxic metal oxides, peroxides, halides, and so on [13][14][15].Therefore, the research and development of cheap and environmentally friendly catalysts is very urgent.Over the past ten years, metal complexes have garnered considerable attention as catalysts in photocatalytic CO 2 reduction and benzyl alcohol oxidation reactions due to their tunable properties, simple synthesis, and catalytic activity.Some metal complexes, such as the Co(II) complex [16,17], Mn(II) complex [18], Cu(I) complexes [19], Fe(II) complex [20], Ru(II) complex [21], and Ln(III) complexes [22,23], have shown excellent catalytic activity and selectivity in photocatalytic CO 2 reduction.For example, the Co(II) complex catalyst shows high photocatalytic CO2 reduction activity with a catalytic rate of 3012.5 µmol•g −1 •h −1 [17].The Fe (II) complex catalyst exhibits high CO 2 selectivity (95%) [20].Some metal complexes, such as the Mn(II) complex [24], Co(II) complex [25], Ru(III) complex [26], Cu(II) complex [27], and Pd(II) complex [28], also exhibit excellent catalytic activity and selectivity in benzyl alcohol oxidation.However, metal complexes have been rarely studied as catalysts for photocatalytic CO 2 reduction and benzyl alcohol oxidation reactions.In recent years, our research group has been working on photocatalytic CO 2 reduction and benzyl alcohol oxidation with metal complexes as catalysts [22,23,[29][30][31].For example, we synthesized a new nine-coordinated Yb(III) complex with 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid and 1,10-phenanthroline ligands, and it showed good photocatalytic activity with the yield and selectivity of CO being 146 mol/g and 97.9% after three hours, respectively [22].The effect of the solvent and reaction time on the benzyl alcohol oxidation activity of the Ba(II) complex catalyst was studied [31].
To further investigate the effects of different central metal ions on the activity and selectivity of the photocatalytic CO 2 reduction of the complex and further search for the best complex catalyst for catalyzing benzyl alcohol oxidation, we conducted this study.A new binuclear Gd(III) complex was synthesized using gadolinium(III) nitrate hexahydrate, 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid, NaOH, and 1,10-phenanthroline in a water-ethanol solution.The Gd(III) complex was characterized using IR, UV-vis, TG-DSC, fluorescence, and singlecrystal X-ray diffraction analyses, and each Gd(III) ion was coordinated with two nitrogen atoms from two Phen ligands and seven oxygen atoms from six L ligands, respectively, forming a nine-coordinated coordination mode.The Hirschfeld surface analysis and the calculations of the electron density distributions of the frontier molecular orbitals of the Gd(III) complex were performed.The catalytic activities of photocatalytic CO 2 reduction and benzyl alcohol oxidation using the Gd(III) complex as a catalyst were performed.The results of photocatalytic CO 2 reduction showed that the yield and the selectivity of CO reached 41.5 µmol/g and more than 99% after four hours, respectively.The results of benzyl alcohol oxidation showed that the yield of benzaldehyde was 45.7% at 120 • C with THF as the solvent under 0.5 MPa O 2 within 2 h.The scheme of the Gd(III) complex is shown in Figure 1.

Infrared Spectrum
The infrared spectrum of the Gd(III) complex is shown in Figure 2. The characteristi bands of free 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid (HL) are at ca. 1758 (ν(C=O)), 1648 (νas(COO − )) 1598 (νs(COO − )), and 1286 (ν(C=O)) cm −1 , respectively [22].In the Gd(III) complex, they appear at 1672, 1633, 1431, and 1253 cm −1 .This shows that the carboxylate O atoms of th L ligand are involved in coordination with the Gd(III) ion.The band at 1599 cm −1 in th Gd(III) complex is assigned to ν(C=N) of the Phen ligand, indicating that the N atoms o the Phen ligand are also coordinated with the Gd(III) ion.

Infrared Spectrum
The infrared spectrum of the Gd(III) complex is shown in Figure 2. The characteristic bands of free 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid (HL) are at ca. 1758 (ν(C=O)), 1648 (ν as (COO − )), 1598 (ν s (COO − )), and 1286 (ν(C=O)) cm −1 , respectively [22].In the Gd(III) complex, they appear at 1672, 1633, 1431, and 1253 cm −1 .This shows that the carboxylate O atoms of the L ligand are involved in coordination with the Gd(III) ion.The band at 1599 cm −1 in the Gd(III) complex is assigned to ν(C=N) of the Phen ligand, indicating that the N atoms of the Phen ligand are also coordinated with the Gd(III) ion.

UV-Vis Spectra
The UV-vis spectra of the Gd(III) complex and 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid (HL) are illustrated in Figure 3. 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid (HL) shows three absorption bands at 284, 221, and 196 nm, and the Gd(III) complex also shows three absorption bands at 265, 227, and 200 nm, which can be assigned to the π-π* transitions of the 4-acetylphenoxyacetate and Phen ligands.The absorption bands of the Phen ligand are at 323, 264, and 237 nm [32]; however, in the Gd(III) complex, the absorption band at 323 nm does not appear, indicating that the Phen ligand takes part in coordination with the Gd(III) ion.

UV-Vis Spectra
The UV-vis spectra of the Gd(III) complex and 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid (HL) are illustrated in Figure 3. 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid (HL) shows three absorption bands at 284, 221, and 196 nm, and the Gd(III) complex also shows three absorption bands at 265, 227, and 200 nm, which can be assigned to the π-π* transitions of the 4-acetylphenoxyacetate and Phen ligands.The absorption bands of the Phen ligand are at 323, 264, and 237 nm [32]; however, in the Gd(III) complex, the absorption band at 323 nm does not appear, indicating that the Phen ligand takes part in coordination with the Gd(III) ion.

UV-Vis Spectra
The UV-vis spectra of the Gd(III) complex and 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid (HL) are illustrated in Figure 3. 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid (HL) shows three absorption bands at 284, 221, and 196 nm, and the Gd(III) complex also shows three absorption bands at 265, 227, and 200 nm, which can be assigned to the π-π* transitions of the 4-acetylphenoxyacetate and Phen ligands.The absorption bands of the Phen ligand are at 323, 264, and 237 nm [32]; however, in the Gd(III) complex, the absorption band at 323 nm does not appear, indicating that the Phen ligand takes part in coordination with the Gd(III) ion.

Thermogravimetric Analysis
To investigate the thermal stability of the Gd(III) complex, the thermogravimetric analysis of the Gd(III) complex was performed at a heating rate of 5 • C/min in an air atmosphere using Al 2 O 3 as a reference.The thermal stability curve of the Gd(III) complex is shown in Figure 4.The Gd(III) complex shows an endothermic peak at 98 • C, and the weight loss is 5.77% (calculated: 3.78%), which corresponds to the loss of four lattice water molecules.The Gd(III) complex shows three exothermic peaks at 195-325 • C, 423 • C, and 526 • C, indicating that the Gd(III) complex decomposes step by step and continues to lose weight by 80.2%, which corresponds to the decomposition of the 4-acetylphenoxyacetate ligands and Phen ligands.

Thermogravimetric Analysis
To investigate the thermal stability of the Gd(III) complex, the thermogravimetric analysis of the Gd(III) complex was performed at a heating rate of 5 °C/min in an air atmosphere using Al2O3 as a reference.The thermal stability curve of the Gd(III) complex is shown in Figure 4.The Gd(III) complex shows an endothermic peak at 98 °C, and the weight loss is 5.77% (calculated: 3.78%), which corresponds to the loss of four lattice water molecules.The Gd(III) complex shows three exothermic peaks at 195-325 °C, 423 °C, and 526 °C, indicating that the Gd(III) complex decomposes step by step and continues to lose weight by 80.2%, which corresponds to the decomposition of the 4-acetylphenoxyacetate ligands and Phen ligands.

Structural Description of the Gd(III) Complex
The molecular structure of the Gd(III) complex is shown in Figure 5. Important bond lengths (Å) and angles (°) for the Gd(III) complex are listed in Table 1.The one-dimensional chained structure is shown in Figure 6.The three-dimensional network structure is shown in Figure 7.The single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis indicates that the structure of the Gd(III) complex is the same as the one we reported for the Yb(III) complex in the literature [22].Furthermore, the title Gd(III) complex is binuclear according to the bridged oxygen atoms from the carboxylate groups with the Gd(III)-Gd(III) distance of 3.940 Å and crystallizes in the triclinic space group P-1.It can be seen from Figure 5 that the Gd(III) complex is made up of two Gd(III) ions, six 4-acetylphenoxyacetate ligands, two Phen ligands, and four lattice water molecules.Each Gd(III) ion is coordinated with three oxygen atoms (O7a, O8a, O8, or O7, O8a, and O8) from two bridged tridentate L ligands, two oxygen atoms (O9, O10a, or O9a, and O10) from two bridged bidentate L ligands, two oxygen atoms (O1, O2, or O1a, and O2a) from one bidentate L ligand, and two nitrogen atoms (N1, N2, or N1a, and N2a) from one 1,10-phenantroline co-ligand.This forms a nine-coordinated environment.The Gd1-O and Gd1-N bond lengths are in the range of 2.350(3)-2.548(3)Å and 2.545(4)-2.599(4)Å, respectively, which is similar to the corresponding bond lengths of those reported in the literature [23]

Structural Description of the Gd(III) Complex
The molecular structure of the Gd(III) complex is shown in Figure 5. Important bond lengths (Å) and angles ( • ) for the Gd(III) complex are listed in Table 1.The one-dimensional chained structure is shown in Figure 6.The three-dimensional network structure is shown in Figure 7.The single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis indicates that the structure of the Gd(III) complex is the same as the one we reported for the Yb(III) complex in the literature [22].Furthermore, the title Gd(III) complex is binuclear according to the bridged oxygen atoms from the carboxylate groups with the Gd(III)-Gd(III) distance of 3.940 Å and crystallizes in the triclinic space group P-1.It can be seen from Figure 5 that the Gd(III) complex is made up of two Gd(III) ions, six 4-acetylphenoxyacetate ligands, two Phen ligands, and four lattice water molecules.Each Gd(III) ion is coordinated with three oxygen atoms (O7a, O8a, O8, or O7, O8a, and O8) from two bridged tridentate L ligands, two oxygen atoms (O9, O10a, or O9a, and O10) from two bridged bidentate L ligands, two oxygen atoms (O1, O2, or O1a, and O2a) from one bidentate L ligand, and two nitrogen atoms (N1, N2, or N1a, and N2a) from one 1,10-phenantroline co-ligand.This forms a nine-coordinated environment.The Gd1-O and Gd1-N bond lengths are in the range of 2.350(3)-2.548(3)Å and 2.545(4)-2.599(4)Å, respectively, which is similar to the corresponding bond lengths of those reported in the literature [23].The O-Gd-O, O-Gd-N, and N-Gd-N bond angles lie in the range of 52.44(11)-148.81(11)• , 72.45(11)-148.26(12) • , and 63.96(12) • , respectively.The angles between the two Gd(III) ions with the two bridged oxygen atoms (Gd1-O8a-Gd1a or Gd1-O8-Gd1a) are 106.57• .The Gd(III) complex molecules form a one-dimensional chained structure (Figure 6) and a three-dimensional network structure via π-π stacking interactions (Figure 7 and Table 2).The π-π stacking interaction data of the Gd(III) complex is listed in Table 2.

DFT Computation
The electron density distributions and energy levels (eVs) of the frontier molecular orbitals for the Gd(III) complex are provided in Figure 8.As shown in Figure 8, the electron densities of HOMO-3, HOMO-2, HOMO-1, and HOMO are located on different 4-acetylphenoxyacetate ligands, whereas LUMO, LUMO + 1, LUMO + 2, and LUMO + 3 are located on the Phen ligand.Moreover, there are nearly the same energy levels for LUMO, LUMO + 1, and other corresponding frontier molecular orbitals, which indicates that they are degenerate frontier molecular orbitals.The absorption of the two ligands, HL and Phen, was calculated with the time-dependent DFT (TDDFT) at the theoretical level of B3LYP/6-31G* [33], in which the added hydrogen atom on HL is optimized with the other fixed atoms.The calculated absorption spectrum is shown in Figure S1, and it correlates well with the experimental results despite somewhat hypsochromic shifts.It confirms that the absorption spectrum of the Gd(III) complex resembles those of the two ligands.Cg2: N2-C6-C7-C10-C11-C12; Cg3: C4-C5-C6-C7-C8-C9; Cg8: N2-C6-C5-C4-C9-C8-C7-C10-C11-

DFT Computation
The electron density distributions and energy levels (eVs) of the frontier mole orbitals for the Gd(III) complex are provided in Figure 8.As shown in Figure 8, the tron densities of HOMO-3, HOMO-2, HOMO-1, and HOMO are located on diff 4-acetylphenoxyacetate ligands, whereas LUMO, LUMO + 1, LUMO + 2, and LUMO are located on the Phen ligand.Moreover, there are nearly the same energy level LUMO, LUMO + 1, and other corresponding frontier molecular orbitals, which indi that they are degenerate frontier molecular orbitals.The absorption of the two liga HL and Phen, was calculated with the time-dependent DFT (TDDFT) at the theor level of B3LYP/6-31G* [33], in which the added hydrogen atom on HL is optimized the other fixed atoms.The calculated absorption spectrum is shown in Figure S1, a correlates well with the experimental results despite somewhat hypsochromic shif confirms that the absorption spectrum of the Gd(III) complex resembles those of the ligands.

Hirschfeld Surface Analysis of the Gd(III) Complex
Crystal Explorer software (version 21.5) was utilized to examine the Hirschfeld face of the Gd(III) complex.Figure 9 illustrates the Hirschfeld surfaces, with the dn di, de, and crystal's roughness depicted in panels a to d.Additionally, two-dimensional fingerprint plots are displayed, which provide a comprehensive as well as detail the top three types of interactions: all interactions, hydrogen-hydro

Hirschfeld Surface Analysis of the Gd(III) Complex
Crystal Explorer software (version 21.5) was utilized to examine the Hirschfeld surface of the Gd(III) complex.Figure 9 illustrates the Hirschfeld surfaces, with the dnorm, di, de, and crystal's roughness depicted in panels a to d.Additionally, the two-dimensional fingerprint plots are displayed, which provide a comprehensive view as well as detail the top three types of interactions: all interactions, hydrogen-hydrogen, oxygen-hydrogen/hydrogenoxygen, and carbon-hydrogen/hydrogen-carbon interactions, as shown in panels e to h.According to the computational analysis, hydrogen-hydrogen contacts were identified as the predominant factor, accounting for 39.4% of the Hirschfeld surface area.Oxygenhydrogen/hydrogen made substantial contributions to the manuscript and cannot be changed-made substantial contributions to the manuscript and cannot be changed oxygen interactions and carbon-hydrogen/hydrogen made substantial contributions to the manuscript and cannot be changed-carbon interactions followed, with contributions of 29.9% and 24.9%, respectively.Notably, π-π stacking interactions, as indicated by the carbon-carbon contacts, minimally contributed to the crystal structure, with a Hirschfeld surface area percentage of only 4.2%.
Molecules 2024, 29, 3039 9 of 17 hydrogen contacts were identified as the predominant factor, accounting for 39.4% of the Hirschfeld surface area.Oxygen-hydrogen/hydrogen made substantial contributions to the manuscript and cannot be changed-made substantial contributions to the manuscript and cannot be changed oxygen interactions and carbon-hydrogen/hydrogen made substantial contributions to the manuscript and cannot be changed-carbon interactions followed, with contributions of 29.9% and 24.9%, respectively.Notably, π-π stacking interactions, as indicated by the carbon-carbon contacts, minimally contributed to the crystal structure, with a Hirschfeld surface area percentage of only 4.2%.

Fluorescence Properties
The fluorescence properties of the Gd(III) complex, 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid, and 1,10-phenanthroline in the ethanol solution were investigated.The excitation and emission spectra are shown in Figure 10.As shown in Figure 10a, the optimal excitation peak for the Gd(III) complex is 336 nm.The Gd(III) complex exhibits three emission peaks at 371 nm, 596 nm, and 620 nm, respectively, where the peak at 371 nm can be attributed to the emission peak of the ligand.The fluorescence emissions of the 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid and 1,10-phenanthroline ligands in the ethanol solution were measured at the optimal excitation wavelength (336 nm) under the same conditions.Among them, the peak at 372 nm is the fluorescence emission of 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid, and the peak at 370 nm is that of the 1,10-phenanthroline ligand.The fluorescence peak of the Gd(III) complex at 370 nm can be attributed to the emission peak of the 4-acetylphenoxyacetate and 1,10-phenanthroline ligands.The emission peaks at 596 nm and 620 nm of the Gd(III) complex belong to the 5 D0 → 7 F1 and 5 D0 → 7 F2 transitions, respectively, where the 5 D0 → 7 F2 transition at 620 nm is the strongest, with the next strongest being the 5 D0 → 7 F1 transition at 596 nm, indicating the best match between organic ligand triplet levels and the rare earth Gd(III) ion.Additionally, the coordination environment of the rare earth Gd(III) ion in the complex is favorable for efficient energy transfer.

Fluorescence Properties
The fluorescence properties of the Gd(III) complex, 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid, and 1,10-phenanthroline in the ethanol solution were investigated.The excitation and emission spectra are shown in Figure 10.As shown in Figure 10a, the optimal excitation peak for the Gd(III) complex is 336 nm.The Gd(III) complex exhibits three emission peaks at 371 nm, 596 nm, and 620 nm, respectively, where the peak at 371 nm can be attributed to the emission peak of the ligand.The fluorescence emissions of the 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid and 1,10-phenanthroline ligands in the ethanol solution were measured at the optimal excitation wavelength (336 nm) under the same conditions.Among them, the peak at 372 nm is the fluorescence emission of 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid, and the peak at 370 nm is that of the 1,10-phenanthroline ligand.The fluorescence peak of the Gd(III) complex at 370 nm can be attributed to the emission peak of the 4-acetylphenoxyacetate and 1,10phenanthroline ligands.The emission peaks at 596 nm and 620 nm of the Gd(III) complex belong to the 5 D 0 → 7 F 1 and 5 D 0 → 7 F 2 transitions, respectively, where the 5 D 0 → 7 F 2 transition at 620 nm is the strongest, with the next strongest being the 5 D 0 → 7 F 1 transition at 596 nm, indicating the best match between organic ligand triplet levels and the rare earth Gd(III) ion.Additionally, the coordination environment of the rare earth Gd(III) ion in the complex is favorable for efficient energy transfer.

Photocatalytic CO2 Reduction Activity of the Gd(III) Complex
The photocatalytic CO2 reduction measurement of the Gd(III) complex was carried out to explore its application in the field of CO2 reduction.It can be observed in Figure 11 that the CO yield is 12.4 µmol/g in the first hour.After four hours of UV-vis light irradiation, the yield of CO reached 41.5 µmol/g.This indicates that the yield of CO gradually increases with the extension of reaction time, suggesting the presence of real catalytic activity of the Gd(III) complex.In addition, the CO selectivity is high compared to CH4; the value was more than 99%.The cyclic experiment photocatalytic CO2 reduction was carried out, and the results are shown in Figure 11d.It was found that the stability of the catalyst was reasonable.We studied photocatalytic CO2 reduction using the Yb (III) complex as the catalyst, and it showed good photocatalytic activity, with a CO yield and selectivity of 146 µmol/g and 97.9% after three hours of UV-vis light irradiation, indicating that the central metal ions have a significant effect on photocatalytic CO2 reduction [22].Meanwhile, we also investigated photocatalytic CO2 reduction using the Gd(III complex with different ligands, and they showed photocatalytic activity, with a CO yield and selectivity of 60.3 µmol/g and 100% after three hours of UV-vis light irradiation, indicating that the ligands also have an effect on photocatalytic CO2 reduction [23].This provides a reference for us to continue photocatalytic CO2 reduction reactions using a complex as a catalyst in the future.

Photocatalytic CO 2 Reduction Activity of the Gd(III) Complex
The photocatalytic CO 2 reduction measurement of the Gd(III) complex was carried out to explore its application in the field of CO 2 reduction.It can be observed in Figure 11 that the CO yield is 12.4 µmol/g in the first hour.After four hours of UV-vis light irradiation, the yield of CO reached 41.5 µmol/g.This indicates that the yield of CO gradually increases with the extension of reaction time, suggesting the presence of real catalytic activity of the Gd(III) complex.In addition, the CO selectivity is high compared to CH 4 ; the value was more than 99%.The cyclic experiment photocatalytic CO 2 reduction was carried out, and the results are shown in Figure 11d.It was found that the stability of the catalyst was reasonable.We studied photocatalytic CO 2 reduction using the Yb (III) complex as the catalyst, and it showed good photocatalytic activity, with a CO yield and selectivity of 146 µmol/g and 97.9% after three hours of UV-vis light irradiation, indicating that the central metal ions have a significant effect on photocatalytic CO 2 reduction [22].Meanwhile, we also investigated photocatalytic CO 2 reduction using the Gd(III) complex with different ligands, and they showed photocatalytic activity, with a CO yield and selectivity of 60.3 µmol/g and 100% after three hours of UV-vis light irradiation, indicating that the ligands also have an effect on photocatalytic CO 2 reduction [23].This provides a reference for us to continue photocatalytic CO 2 reduction reactions using a complex as a catalyst in the future.

Catalytic Activity of the Gd(III) Complex
The prepared Gd(III) complex was explored for its catalytic performance as an ox dation catalyst using benzyl alcohol oxidation to benzaldehyde as a model reaction.Th results are displayed in Table 3.The catalytic activity of the blank (without a catalys was very low, with a benzyl alcohol conversion of 6.5% for the selective benzyl alcoho oxidation at 120 °C within 2 h under 0.5 MPa of O2 using THF as a solvent.However, th conversion of benzyl alcohol increased significantly after adding the Gd(III) complex The conversion of benzyl alcohol increased with increasing reaction temperature.Th same phenomenon was observed when using 1,4-dioxane as a solvent (Table 3, entries 3 5).However, the benzaldehyde selectivity decreased with an increase in the reactio temperature.The solvents also displayed a remarkable effect on benzyl alcohol conver sion, benzaldehyde selectivity, and the yields for the Gd(III) complex catalyst.Th Gd(III) complex catalyst exhibited the highest catalytic activity (a yield of 45.7%) for se lective benzyl alcohol oxidation to benzaldehyde in THF.Wang et al. [34] reported tha the Zn(II) complex [ZnL2(H2O)2] (HL = 4-acetylbenzoic acid) showed good catalytic ac tivity with a benzyl alcohol conversion rate of 85.6% and a benzaldehyde yield of 65.6% at 100 °C under 0.3 Mpa of O2 within 3 h.The benzyl alcohol conversion and benzalde hyde yield were 49.1% and 45.2% using the Ni(II) complex [Ni(L)2(H2O)2] (HL 6-phenylpyridine-2-carboxylic acid) at 90 °C under 0.7 MPa within 2 h in THF [35].Th conversion of benzyl alcohol and the yield of benzaldehyde was 78.1% and 22.8% usin the Zn(II) complex and ZnL4(Phen)2 catalyst (HL 3-bromo-2-hydroxybenzaldehyde-pyridine-2-carbohydrazone, Phen 1,10-phenanthroline) at 100 °C for 4 h under 5 bar of O2 [30].The Gd(III) complex cata lyst showed a lower conversion of benzyl alcohol than ZnL4(Phen)2, but it showed higher yield of benzaldehyde.Although the Gd(II) complex catalyst displayed lowe catalytic activity than the [ZnL2(H2O)2] and [ZnL2(H2O)2] catalysts, it displayed goo stability and could be reused at least three times with no drop in catalytic activity (Tabl 4).

Catalytic Activity of the Gd(III) Complex
The prepared Gd(III) complex was explored for its catalytic performance as an oxidation catalyst using benzyl alcohol oxidation to benzaldehyde as a model reaction.The results are displayed in Table 3.The catalytic activity of the blank (without a catalyst) was very low, with a benzyl alcohol conversion of 6.5% for the selective benzyl alcohol oxidation at 120 • C within 2 h under 0.5 MPa of O 2 using THF as a solvent.However, the conversion of benzyl alcohol increased significantly after adding the Gd(III) complex.The conversion of benzyl alcohol increased with increasing reaction temperature.The same phenomenon was observed when using 1,4-dioxane as a solvent (Table 3, entries 3-5).However, the benzaldehyde selectivity decreased with an increase in the reaction temperature.The solvents also displayed a remarkable effect on benzyl alcohol conversion, benzaldehyde selectivity, and the yields for the Gd(III) complex catalyst.The Gd(III) complex catalyst exhibited the highest catalytic activity (a yield of 45.7%) for selective benzyl alcohol oxidation to benzaldehyde in THF.Wang et al. [34] reported that the Zn(II) complex [ZnL 2 (H 2 O) 2 ] (HL = 4-acetylbenzoic acid) showed good catalytic activity with a benzyl alcohol conversion rate of 85.6% and a benzaldehyde yield of 65.6% at 100 • C under 0.3 Mpa of O 2 within 3 h.The benzyl alcohol conversion and benzaldehyde yield were 49.1% and 45.2% using the Ni(II) complex [Ni(L) 2 (H 2 O) 2 ] (HL = 6-phenylpyridine-2carboxylic acid) at 90 • C under 0.7 MPa within 2 h in THF [35].The conversion of benzyl alcohol and the yield of benzaldehyde was 78.1% and 22.8% using the Zn(II) complex and ZnL 4 (Phen) 2 catalyst (HL = 3-bromo-2-hydroxybenzaldehyde-pyridine-2-carbohydrazone, Phen = 1,10-phenanthroline) at 100 • C for 4 h under 5 bar of O 2 [30].The Gd(III) complex catalyst showed a lower conversion of benzyl alcohol than ZnL 4 (Phen) 2, but it showed a higher yield of benzaldehyde.Although the Gd(II) complex catalyst displayed lower catalytic activity than the [ZnL 2 (H 2 O) 2 ] and [ZnL 2 (H 2 O) 2 ] catalysts, it displayed good stability and could be reused at least three times with no drop in catalytic activity (Table 4).
The reusability of the Gd(III) complex catalyst in the benzyl alcohol oxidation reaction was tested at 120 • C within 2 h under 0.5 MPa of O 2 using THF as the solvent.The results are shown in Table 4. Clearly, no drop in catalytic activity can be found using the Gd(III) complex catalyst in the first, second, and third runs.The Gd(III) complex catalyst displayed good stability for the oxidation of benzyl alcohol.a Reaction conditions: benzyl alcohol (1.0 mmol), THF (7.0 mL), Gd(III) complex (25.0 mg), 120 • C, 0.5 MPa, 2 h.

Materials and Measurements
The reagents of gadolinium(III) nitrate hexahydrate, 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid, NaOH, and 1,10-phenanthroline were used as received from the Jilin Chinese Academy of Sciences-Yanshen Technology Co., Ltd.(Jilin, China).The IR spectrum was obtained on a Tianjin Gangdong (Tianjin, China) FTIR-850 spectrophotometer (KBr discs, range 4000-400 cm −1 ), and the resolution and number of scans were 0.5 cm −1 and 8.The UV-vis spectra were acquired on a PERSEE T9 (Beijing, China) spectrophotometer equipped with quartz cuvettes with a 1 cm path length in the 190-700 nm region in a water solution.TG-DTA was performed on a HENVEN HCT-2 thermal analyzer (Beijing, China).The fluorescence measurements were acquired on a PE LS-55 fluorescence spectrophotometer in the 350-650 nm region, equipped with quartz cuvettes with a 1 cm path length (PerkinElmer, Waltham, MA, USA).The excitation and emission slit widths were 5 nm.The DFT calculations were performed to understand the electronic structure of the Gd(III) complex with the Gaussian 16 package [36].The crystal structures were used to obtain the electron density distributions of the Gd(III) complex using the functional PBE0 [37] in combination with the pople basis set, 6-31G(d) [38], for C, H, N, O, and the large-core relativistic effective core potential (RECP) ECP53MWB [39] for Gd.The electron density distributions were visualized using the VMD package and Multiwfn program [40,41].The Hirschfeld surface analysis of the Gd(III) complex was performed using CrystalExplorer software (https://crystalexplorer.net/, accessed on 10 April 2024) [42].The crystal data of the Gd(III) complex were obtained on a Bruker CCD area detector (296.15K, multi-scan, Cu at zero, SuperNova, Dual).

Crystal Structure Determination
The X-ray diffraction intensities of the Gd(III) complex were collected at 296.15 K from a block colorless crystal with dimensions of 0.15 mm × 0.12 mm × 0.10 mm.A total of 39,297 unique reflections were collected with a Bruker Smart CCD diffractometer in the range of 2.31 • < θ < 23.65 • using Olex2 [43] at 296.15 K.A total of 9953 reflections with I > 2(σ) were used in a structural solution, and the refinement was selected from 6998 independent reflections for X-ray diffraction and R int = 0.0704.The structure was solved using the direct method with the SHELXS program [44] and refined with the SHELXL [45] program, respectively.The crystal data collection and handling of the Gd(III) complex are listed in Table 5.The crystallographic data for the structure reported in this paper was deposited with the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre as supplementary publication No. CCDC 2347120.The CIF file can be obtained conveniently from the website: https://www.ccdc.cam.ac.uk/structures, accessed on 10 April 2024.

Photocatalytic CO 2 Reduction Test
Firstly, 100 mL of deionized water, H 2 O, was added into a quartz reactor with vigorous stirring, and we controlled the temperature at 20 • C. Subsequently, the 50 mg Gd(III) complex catalyst was dispersed into the above solution.Then, the above mixed solution was bubbled using high-purity CO 2 gas for 15 min.The reactor was sealed and began to perform the photocatalytic CO 2 reduction experiment.The light source was the 300 W Xe arc lamp, which came from Beijing Trusttech Co., Ltd.(Beijing, China) The gas was let out every hour and tested via a gas chromatograph (Propark Q column, FID detector).

General Procedure for Benzyl Alcohol Oxidation
In a typical procedure, benzyl alcohol oxidation with O 2 as the oxidant was carried out in a 20 mL stainless-steel high-pressure reactor equipped with a magnetic stirrer and thermoelectric couple.The mixture of the benzyl alcohol (1 mmol, 108.4 mg), solvents (tetrahydrofuran (THF) or dioxane, 7 mL), and the Gd(III) complex catalyst (25 mg) was added into the high-pressure reactor.Then, the high-pressure reactor was sealed and purged three times with O 2 .The reactor was subsequently pressurized with O 2 to 0.5 MPa at room temperature.The high-pressure reactor was heated to the desired temperature (100-120 • C) and maintained for 2 h with vigorous stirring (2000 rpm).At the end of each run, the reactor was cooled down to room temperature and vented.The Gd(III) complex was filtered off via centrifugation (14,000 rpm), and the liquid products were analyzed via gas chromatography (GC-6890, Purkinje General instrument Co., Ltd., Beijing, China) with flame ionization detectors (FID) and a SE-54 capillary column (30 m × 0.25 mm × 0.25 mm).The conversion of benzyl alcohol and the selectivity of the benzaldehyde values represent the average of three experiments.The reuse of the Gd(III) complex catalyst for the catalytic oxidation of benzyl alcohol was performed within three runs to test the catalytic stability.The Gd(III) complex catalyst was separated from the mixture via centrifugation after each run and dried at 100 • C for 2 h in a drying oven.The catalyst mass was maintained at 25 mg for each run.

Conclusions
A new binuclear Gd(III) complex was synthesized and characterized using IR, UV-vis, TG-DSC, fluorescence, and single-crystal X-ray diffraction analyses.The Hirschfeld surface analysis and the density functional theory (DFT) calculations of the Gd(III) complex were performed.The catalytic activities of photocatalytic CO 2 reduction and benzyl alcohol oxidation using the Gd(III) complex as a catalyst were measured.Based on the above results, a series of Gd(III) complexes could be designed and synthesized to optimize the catalytic activity of photocatalytic CO 2 reduction and benzyl alcohol oxidation.

Figure 1 .
Figure 1.The scheme of the Gd(III) complex.

Figure 2 .
Figure 2. The infrared spectrum of the Gd(III) complex.

Figure 2 .
Figure 2. The infrared spectrum of the Gd(III) complex.

Figure 2 .
Figure 2. The infrared spectrum of the Gd(III) complex.

Figure 4 .
Figure 4. Thermal stability curve of the Gd(III) complex.

Figure 4 .
Figure 4. Thermal stability curve of the Gd(III) complex.

Figure 6 .
Figure 6.The one-dimensional chained structure of the Phen rings via π-π stacking interactio

Figure 6 .
Figure 6.The one-dimensional chained structure of the Phen rings via π-π stacking interactions.

Figure 6 .
Figure 6.The one-dimensional chained structure of the Phen rings via π-π stacking interactions.

Figure 7 .
Figure 7.The three-dimensional network structure of the interactions via π-π stacking.

Figure 7 .
Figure 7.The three-dimensional network structure of the interactions via π-π stacking.

Figure 10 .
Figure 10.(a) The excitation spectrum of the Gd(III) complex and (b) the emission spectra of the Gd(III) complex, 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid, and 1,10-phenanthroline in the ethanol solution.The excitation and emission slit widths are 5 nm.

Figure 10 .
Figure 10.(a) The excitation spectrum of the Gd(III) complex and (b) the emission spectra of the Gd(III) complex, 4-acetylphenoxyacetic acid, and 1,10-phenanthroline in the ethanol solution.The excitation and emission slit widths are 5 nm.

Figure 11 .
Figure 11.(a) Photocatalytic CO 2 reduction performance, (b) CO and (c) CH 4 selectivity of the Gd(III) complex, and (d) the cyclic experiments of photocatalytic CO 2 reduction.

Table 2 .
The π-π stacking interaction data of the Gd(III) complex.

Table 2 .
The π-π stacking interaction data of the Gd(III) complex.

Table 3 .
The benzyl alcohol conversions, benzaldehyde selectivity, and yields for the Gd(III) complex in selective benzyl alcohol oxidation a .

Table 4 .
The recyclability of the Gd(III) complex in benzyl alcohol oxidation a .

Table 5 .
The crystal data collection and handling of the Gd(III) complex.