4.6 Article

Beyond the Classical Contributions to Exchange Coupling in Binuclear Transition Metal Complexes

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
Volume 125, Issue 11, Pages 2276-2283

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpca.0c11237

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Grant Agency of the Czech Republic [18-13093S, 20-06451Y]
  2. MSMT CR [LTAUSA19148]

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This study provides unprecedented insights into the exchange-coupling mechanisms between the magnetic centers in bis-mu-oxo bimetallic complexes, highlighting the essential and counterintuitive role of predominantly unoccupied valence metal d orbitals in strong antiferromagnetic coupling. This discovery sheds light on a new mechanism of exchange interaction between magnetic transition metal centers, enhancing our understanding of their catalytic and magnetic properties.
Complexes with two or more magnetically coupled metal ions have attracted considerable attention as catalysts of many vital processes, single-molecule magnets, or spin-crossover compounds. Elucidation of their electronic structures is essential for understanding their catalytic and magnetic properties. Here, we provide an unprecedented insight into exchange-coupling mechanisms between the magnetic centers in six prototypical bis-mu-oxo bimetallic M2O2 complexes, including two biologically relevant models of non-heme iron enzymes. Employing multiconfigurational/multireference methods and related orbital entanglement analysis, we revealed the essential and counterintuitive role of predominantly unoccupied valence metal d orbitals in their strong antiferromagnetic coupling. We found that the participation of these orbitals is twofold. First, they enhance the superexchange between the singly occupied d orbitals. Second, they become substantially occupied and thus directly magnetically active, which we perceive as a new mechanism of the exchange interaction between the magnetic transition metal centers.

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