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Download fileSpectroscopic and Computational Studies of Spin States of Iron(IV) Nitrido and Imido Complexes
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posted on 2017-04-05, 16:19 authored by Lukas Bucinsky, Martin Breza, Wei-Tsung Lee, Anne K. Hickey, Diane A. Dickie, Ismael Nieto, Jordan A. DeGayner, T. David Harris, Karsten Meyer, J. Krzystek, Andrew Ozarowski, Joscha Nehrkorn, Alexander Schnegg, Karsten Holldack, Rolfe H. Herber, Joshua Telser, Jeremy M. SmithHigh-oxidation-state
metal complexes with multiply bonded ligands are of great interest
for both their reactivity as well as their fundamental bonding properties.
This paper reports a combined spectroscopic and theoretical investigation
into the effect of the apical multiply bonded ligand on the spin-state
preferences of threefold symmetric iron(IV) complexes with tris(carbene)
donor ligands. Specifically, singlet (S = 0) nitrido
[{PhB(ImR)3}FeN], R = tBu (1), Mes (mesityl, 2) and the related triplet
(S = 1) imido complexes, [{PhB(ImR)3}Fe(NR′)]+, R = Mes, R′ = 1-adamantyl
(3), tBu (4), were investigated
by electronic absorption and Mössbauer effect spectroscopies.
For comparison, two other Fe(IV) nitrido complexes, [(TIMENAr)FeN]+ (TIMENAr = tris[2-(3-aryl-imidazol-2-ylidene)ethyl]amine;
Ar = Xyl (xylyl), Mes), were investigated by 57Fe Mössbauer
spectroscopy, including applied-field measurements. The paramagnetic
imido complexes 3 and 4 were also studied
by magnetic susceptibility measurements (for 3) and paramagnetic
resonance spectroscopy: high-frequency and -field electron paramagnetic
resonance (for 3 and 4) and frequency-domain
Fourier-transform (FD-FT) terahertz electron paramagnetic resonance
(for 3), which reveal their zero-field splitting parameters.
Experimentally correlated theoretical studies comprising ligand-field
theory and quantum chemical theory, the latter including both density
functional theory and ab initio methods, reveal the key role played
by the Fe 3dz2 (a1) orbital in these systems: the nature of its interaction with the
nitrido or imido ligand dictates the spin-state preference of the
complex. The ability to tune the spin state through the energy and
nature of a single orbital has general relevance
to the factors controlling spin states in complexes with applicability
as single molecule devices.
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paper reportsab initio methodsfrequency-domain Fourier-transformt Buligand-field theoryapplied-field measurementsFD-FTspin-state preferenceSpin Statesfield electronimido complexes 3MeImido Complexes High-oxidation-state metal complexesresonance spectroscopyzero-field splitting parametersFe 3nitridoComputational StudiesTIMEN Arspin-state preferencessusceptibility measurementsterahertz electron1- adamantylz 2quantum chemical theoryimido ligand dictatesmolecule devices