4.2 Article

Dissecting the bond-formation process of d10-metal-ethene complexes with multireference approaches

Journal

THEORETICAL CHEMISTRY ACCOUNTS
Volume 134, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00214-015-1726-3

Keywords

d(10)-Transition metals; DMRG; CASSCF; Orbital entanglement; Energy decomposition analysis; Back-bonding; pi-Donation

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. Hungarian Research Fund [OTKA K100908, NN110360]
  3. Mitacs Globalink program
  4. Swiss National Science Foundation [P2EZP2 148650]
  5. Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship program
  6. National Science Center Poland [DEC-2013/11/B/ST4/00771, DEC-2012/07/B/ST4/01347]
  7. McMaster Chemistry AMP
  8. Chemical Biology Summer Research Scholarship
  9. NSERC Undergraduate Student Research Award fellowship

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than palladium-ethene compounds with similar coordination spheres. The bonding mechanism of ethene to a nickel or palladium center is studied by the density matrix renormalization group algorithm, the complete active space self-consistent field method, coupled cluster theory, and density functional theory. Specifically, we focus on the interaction between the metal atom and bis-ethene ligands in perpendicular and parallel orientations. The bonding situation in these structural isomers is further scrutinized using energy decomposition analysis and quantum information theory. Our study highlights the fact that when two ethene ligands are oriented perpendicular to each other, the complex is stabilized by the metal-to-ligand double-back-bonding mechanism. Moreover, we demonstrate that nickel-ethene complexes feature a stronger and more covalent interaction between the ligands and the metal center than palladium-ethene compounds with similar coordination spheres.

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