Spectroscopic X-ray and Mössbauer Characterization of M(6) and M(5) Iron(Molybdenum)-Carbonyl Carbide Clusters: High Carbide-Iron Covalency Enhances Local Iron Site Electron Density Despite Cluster Oxidation

M(6)和M(5)铁(钼)-羰基碳化物簇的X射线和穆斯堡尔谱表征:高碳化物-铁共价性增强了局部铁位点的电子密度,即使簇发生氧化

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Abstract

The present study employs a suite of spectroscopic techniques to evaluate the electronic and bonding characteristics of the interstitial carbide in a set of iron-carbonyl-carbide clusters, one of which is substituted with a molybdenum atom. The M(6)C and M(5)C clusters are the dianions (Et(4)N)(2)[Fe(6)(μ(6)-C)(μ(2)-CO)(2)(CO)(14)] (1), [K(benzo-18-crown-6)](2)[Fe(5)(μ(5)-C)(μ(2)-CO)(1)(CO)(13)] (2), and [K(benzo-18-crown-6)](2)[Fe(5)Mo(μ(6)-C)(μ(2)-CO)(2)(CO)(15)] (3). Because 1 and 2 have the same overall cluster charge (2-) but different numbers of iron sites (1: 6 sites → 2: 5 sites), the metal atoms of 2 are formally oxidized compared to those in 1. Despite this, Mössbauer studies indicate that the iron sites in 2 possess significantly greater electron density (lower spectroscopic oxidation state) compared with those in 1. Iron K-edge X-ray absorption and valence-to-core X-ray emission spectroscopy measurements, paired with density functional theory spectral calculations, revealed the presence of significant metal-to-metal and carbide 2p-based character in the filled valence and low-lying unfilled electronic manifolds. In all of the above experiments, the presence of the molybdenum atom in 3 (Fe(5)Mo) results in somewhat unremarkable spectroscopic properties that are essentially a "hybrid" of 1 (Fe(6)) and 2 (Fe(5)). The overall electronic portrait that emerges illustrates that the central inorganic carbide ligand is essential for distributing charge and maximizing electronic communication throughout the cluster. It is evident that the carbide coordination environment is quite flexible and adaptive: it can drastically modify the covalency of individual Fe-C bonds based on local structural changes and redox manipulation of the clusters. In light of these findings, our data and calculations suggest a potential role for the central carbon atom in FeMoco, which likely performs a similar function in order to maintain cluster integrity through multiple redox and ligand binding events.

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