4.6 Article

Molybdenum-Sulfur Bond: Electronic Structure of Low-Lying States of MoS

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
Volume 126, Issue 7, Pages 1168-1181

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpca.1c10672

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Special Accounts for Research Grants [KE 17034]
  2. National Science Foundation [CHE-1952924]

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This study presents an accurate investigation of the chemical bonding and electronic structure of the MoS molecule, highlighting the importance of including inner electrons in the correlated space. The experimental measurement of the bond dissociation energy is in excellent agreement with the computational result, demonstrating the accuracy of the calculations. The connection between the chemical bonding of MoS species and the solid MoS2 is emphasized.
The molybdenum-sulfur bond plays an important role in many processes such as nitrogen-fixation, and it is found as a building block in layered materials such as MoS2, known for its various shapes and morphologies. Here, we present an accurate theoretical and experimental investigation of the chemical bonding and the electronic structure of 20 low-lying states of the MoS molecule. Multireference and coupled cluster methodologies, namely, MRCISD, MRCISD + Q, RCCSD(T), and RCCSD[T], were employed in conjunction with basis sets up to aug-cc-pwCV5Z-PP/aug-cc-pwCV5Z for the study of these states. We note the significance of including the inner 4s(2)4p(6) electrons of Mo and 2s(2)2p(6) of S in the correlated space to obtain accurate results. Experimentally, the predissociation threshold of MoS was measured using resonant two-photon ionization spectroscopy, allowing for a precise measurement of the bond dissociation energy. Our extrapolated computational D-0 value for the ground state is 3.936 eV, in excellent agreement with our experimental measurement of 3.932 +/- 0.004 eV. The largest calculated adiabatic D-0 (5.74 eV) and the largest dipole moment (6.50 D) were found for the (5)Sigma(+) state, where a triple bond is formed. Finally, the connection of the chemical bonding of the isolated MoS species to the relevant solid, MoS2, is emphasized. The low-lying septet states of the diatomic molecule are involved in the material as a building block, explaining the stability and the variety of the shapes and morphologies of the material.

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