Abrupt Change from Ionic to Covalent Bonding in Nickel Halides Accompanied by Ligand Field Inversion.
Max FlachKonstantin HirschTim GitzingerMartin TimmMayara da Silva SantosOlesya S AblyasovaMarkus KubinBernd von IssendorffJ Tobias LauVicente Zamudio-BayerPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2024)
The electronic configuration of transition metal centers and their ligands is crucial for redox reactions in metal catalysis and electrochemistry. We characterize the electronic structure of gas-phase nickel monohalide cations via nickel L 2,3 -edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy. Comparison with multiplet charge-transfer simulations and experimental spectra of selectively prepared nickel monocations in both ground- and excited-state configurations are used to facilitate our analysis. Only for [NiF] + with an assigned ground state of 3 Π can the bonding be described as predominantly ionic, while the heavier halides with assigned ground states of 3 Π or 3 Δ exhibit a predominantly covalent contribution. The increase in covalency is accompanied by a transition from a classical ligand field for [NiF] + to an inverted ligand field for [NiCl] + , [NiBr] + , and [NiI] + , resulting in a leading 3d 9 L̲ configuration with a ligand hole (L̲) and a 3d occupation indicative of nickel(I) compounds. Hence, the absence of a ligand hole in [NiF] + precludes any ligand-based redox reactions. Additionally, we demonstrate that the shift in energy of the L 3 resonance is reduced compared to that of isolated atoms upon the formation of covalent compounds.