A Unified Treatment of the Relationship Between Ligand Substituents and Spin State in a Family of Iron(II) Complexes

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2016 Mar 18;55(13):4327-31. doi: 10.1002/anie.201600165. Epub 2016 Mar 1.

Abstract

The influence of ligands on the spin state of a metal ion is of central importance for bioinorganic chemistry, and the production of base-metal catalysts for synthesis applications. Complexes derived from [Fe(bpp)2 ](2+) (bpp=2,6-di{pyrazol-1-yl}pyridine) can be high-spin, low-spin, or spin-crossover (SCO) active depending on the ligand substituents. Plots of the SCO midpoint temperature (T1/2 ) in solution vs. the relevant Hammett parameter show that the low-spin state of the complex is stabilized by electron-withdrawing pyridyl ("X") substituents, but also by electron-donating pyrazolyl ("Y") substituents. Moreover, when a subset of complexes with halogeno X or Y substituents is considered, the two sets of compounds instead show identical trends of a small reduction in T1/2 for increasing substituent electronegativity. DFT calculations reproduce these disparate trends, which arise from competing influences of pyridyl and pyrazolyl ligand substituents on Fe-L σ and π bonding.

Keywords: N ligands; density functional calculations; iron; spin state; substituent effects.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't