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Using Ultrafast X-ray Spectroscopy To Address Questions in Ligand-Field Theory: The Excited State Spin and Structure of [Fe(dcpp)2]2
- Source :
- Britz , A , Gawelda , W , Assefa , T A , Jamula , L L , Yarranton , J T , Galler , A , Khakhulin , D , Diez , M , Harder , M , Doumy , G , March , A M , Bajnóczi , É , Németh , Z , Pápai , M I , Rozsályi , E , Sárosiné Szemes , D , Cho , H , Mukherjee , S , Liu , C , Kim , T K , Schoenlein , R W , Southworth , S H , Young , L , Jakubikova , E , Huse , N , Vankó , G , Bressler , C & McCusker , J K 2019 , ' Using Ultrafast X-ray Spectroscopy To Address Questions in Ligand-Field Theory: The Excited State Spin and Structure of [Fe(dcpp)2]2 ' , Inorganic Chemistry , vol. 58 , no. 14 , pp. 9341-9350 .
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- We have employed a range of ultrafast X-ray spectroscopies in an effort to characterize the lowest energy excited state of [Fe(dcpp)2]2+ (where dcpp is 2,6-(dicarboxypyridyl)pyridine). This compound exhibits an unusually short excited-state lifetime for a low-spin Fe(II) polypyridyl complex of 270 ps in a room-temperature fluid solution, raising questions as to whether the ligand-field strength of dcpp had pushed this system beyond the 5T2/3T1 crossing point and stabilizing the latter as the lowest energy excited state. Kα and Kβ X-ray emission spectroscopies have been used to unambiguously determine the quintet spin multiplicity of the long-lived excited state, thereby establishing the 5T2 state as the lowest energy excited state of this compound. Geometric changes associated with the photoinduced ligand-field state conversion have also been monitored with extended X-ray absorption fine structure. The data show the typical average Fe-ligand bond length elongation of ∼0.18 Å for a 5T2 state and suggest a high anisotropy of the primary coordination sphere around the metal center in the excited 5T2 state, in stark contrast to the nearly perfect octahedral symmetry that characterizes the low-spin 1A1 ground state structure. This study illustrates how the application of time-resolved X-ray techniques can provide insights into the electronic structures of molecules-in particular, transition metal complexes-that are difficult if not impossible to obtain by other means.
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Journal :
- Britz , A , Gawelda , W , Assefa , T A , Jamula , L L , Yarranton , J T , Galler , A , Khakhulin , D , Diez , M , Harder , M , Doumy , G , March , A M , Bajnóczi , É , Németh , Z , Pápai , M I , Rozsályi , E , Sárosiné Szemes , D , Cho , H , Mukherjee , S , Liu , C , Kim , T K , Schoenlein , R W , Southworth , S H , Young , L , Jakubikova , E , Huse , N , Vankó , G , Bressler , C & McCusker , J K 2019 , ' Using Ultrafast X-ray Spectroscopy To Address Questions in Ligand-Field Theory: The Excited State Spin and Structure of [Fe(dcpp)2]2 ' , Inorganic Chemistry , vol. 58 , no. 14 , pp. 9341-9350 .
- Notes :
- application/pdf, English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1178792871
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource