Transition-metal sandwich complexes play key roles in various fields of fundamental and applied chemistry, many of their unique properties arising from the ability to form stable or reactive ions. The...
High-resolution mass-analyzed threshold ionization (MATI) spectra of (η -Ph ) Cr and (η -Ph )(η -PhMe)Cr demonstrate that the Ph groups work as electron donors, decreasing the ionization energy of the gas-phase bisarene complexes. In contrast to electrochemical data, a close similarity of the Ph and Me group effects on the oxidation of free sandwich molecules has been revealed. However, DFT calculations testify for the opposite shifts of the electron density caused by the Me and Ph substituents in the neutral complexes, the latter behaving as an electron-accepting fragment. On the contrary, in the bisarene cations, the Ph group becomes a stronger donor than methyl. This change provides the similar substituent effects observed with the MATI experiment. On the other hand, the well-documented opposite influence of the Me and Ph fragments on the redox potential of the (η -arene) Cr couple in solution appears to be a result of solvation effects but not intramolecular interactions as shown for the first time in this work.
Metallocenes represent one of the most important classes of organometallics with wide prospects for practical use in various fields of chemistry, materials science, molecular electronics, and biomedicine. Many applications of these metal complexes are based on their ability to form molecular ions. We report the first results concerning the changes in the molecular and electronic structure of decamethylmanganocene, Cp*2Mn, upon ionization provided by the high-resolution mass-analyzed threshold ionization (MATI) spectroscopy supported by DFT calculations. The precise ionization energy of Cp*2Mn is determined as 5.349 ± 0.001 eV. The DFT modeling of the MATI spectrum shows that the main structural deformations accompanying the detachment of an electron consist in the elongation of the Mn-C bonds and a change in the Me out-of-plane bending angles. Surprisingly, the DFT calculations predict that most of the reduction in electron density (ED) upon ionization is associated with the hydrogen atoms of the substituents, despite the metal character of the ionized orbital. However, the ED difference isosurfaces reveal a complex mechanism of the charge redistribution involving also the carbon atoms of the molecule.
Sandwich compounds represent the only class of organometallics revealing vibronic structures of Rydberg transitions in their gas-phase absorption and ionization spectra. This provides rare possibilities of verifying computational results for Rydberg-state metal complexes by comparison with experimental spectroscopic data. In this work, the lowest Ryberg p state of bis(η-benzene)chromium (1) corresponding to the 3d→ R4p transition has been modeled for the first time by TD DFT. The calculations were found to be able not only to estimate the energy of the Rydberg excitation in the 1 molecule but also to simulate its vibronic structure on the basis of the Rydberg-state optimized geometries and vibrational frequencies. The structural transformations caused by the Jahn-Teller effect in the excited 1 molecule appear to differ strongly from those in the degenerate-state benzene ion, cobaltocene or other metal-benzene complexes. The in-plane CH bending mode provides the main contribution to the JT distortion of the 1 excited-state D structure resulting in splitting of the R4p state into the R4p and R4p components belonging to the D point group. The calculations predict, however, a fluxional 1 behavior described by the D symmetry. Nevertheless, the JT effect leads to additional allowed vibronic components of the 3d→ R4p transition which is clearly revealed by the TD DFT simulation. The computational results correlate surprisingly well with the known experimental spectroscopic data and provide new insights into vibronic interactions in the Rydberg-state sandwich molecules.
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