Deconvoluting the Role of Electrostatics in Metal Carbonyl Bonding: Dipole Moments and Energy Decomposition Analysis of Late Transition Metal Pincer Complexes
收藏Figshare2024-10-22 更新2026-04-28 收录
下载链接:
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Deconvoluting_the_Role_of_Electrostatics_in_Metal_Carbonyl_Bonding_Dipole_Moments_and_Energy_Decomposition_Analysis_of_Late_Transition_Metal_Pincer_Complexes/27280839
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
While the primary orbital interactions involved in the metal–carbonyl bond are captured by the Dewar-Chatt-Duncanson model, the emerging consensus is that orbital polarization effects caused by electrostatic interactions also play a significant role. With reference to the carbonyl stretching frequencies of a large computational data set of symmetric platinum group metal pincer complexes, we herein show that the latter can be interpreted by reference to the well-established vibrational Stark effect using the dipole moment of the supporting metal fragment as a proxy for the electric field being projected over the carbonyl ligand. Specifically, when this dipole moment is used in combination with the orbital interaction energy for π-backbonding, determined by energy decomposition analysis, carbonyl stretching frequencies are reproduced with much greater statistical significance (R2 = 0.934 vs 0.798) and lower RMSDs (22 vs 39 cm–1) than with the orbital term only. Deconvolution of the metal–carbonyl interaction in this way is physically meaningful and provides a conceptually simple way to explain trends in υ(CO) and account for the existence of nonclassical carbonyl complexes, in which υ(CO) > 2143 cm–1.
创建时间:
2024-10-22



