Electronic, vibrational, and structural properties of a spin-crossover catecholato-iron system in the solid state: theoretical study of the electronic nature of the doublet and sextet states

Chemistry. 2005 Mar 4;11(6):1779-93. doi: 10.1002/chem.200400484.

Abstract

As a functional model of the catechol dioxygenases, [(TPA)Fe(Cat)]BPh4 (TPA = tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine and Cat = catecholate dianion) exhibits the purple-blue coloration indicative of some charge transfer within the ground state. In contrast to a number of high-spin bioinspired systems, it was previously shown that, in the solid state, [(TPA)Fe(Cat)]BPh4 undergoes a two-step S = 1/2 = S = 5/2 spin-crossover. Therefore, the electronic and vibrational characteristics of this compound were investigated in the solid state by UV/Vis absorption and resonance Raman spectroscopies over the temperature range of the transition. This allowed the charge-transfer transitions of the low-spin (LS) form to be identified. In addition, the vibrational progression observed in the NIR absorption of the LS form was assigned to a five-membered chelate ring mode. The X-ray crystal structure solved at two different temperatures, shows the presence of highly distorted pseudo-octahedral ferric complexes that occupy two nonequivalent crystalline sites. The variation of the molecular parameters as a function of temperature strongly suggests that the two-step transition proceeds by a successive transition of the species in the two nonequivalent sites. The thermal dependence of the high-spin fraction of metal ions determined by Mössbauer experiments is consistent with the magnetic data, except for slight deviations in the high temperature range. The optimized geometries, the electronic transitions, vibrational frequencies, and thermodynamic functions were calculated with the B3LYP density functional method for the doublet and the sextet states. The finding of a ground state that possesses a significant mixture of Fe(III)-catecholate and FeII-semiquinonate configurations is discussed with regard to the set of experimental and theoretical data.