Chiral control of spin-crossover dynamics in Fe(II) complexes.
Malte OppermannFrancesco ZinnaJérôme LacourMajed CherguiPublished in: Nature chemistry (2022)
Iron-based spin-crossover complexes hold tremendous promise as multifunctional switches in molecular devices. However, real-world technological applications require the excited high-spin state to be kinetically stable-a feature that has been achieved only at cryogenic temperatures. Here we demonstrate high-spin-state trapping by controlling the chiral configuration of the prototypical iron(II)tris(4,4'-dimethyl-2,2'-bipyridine) in solution, associated for stereocontrol with the enantiopure Δ- or Λ-enantiomer of tris(3,4,5,6-tetrachlorobenzene-1,2-diolato-κ 2 O 1 ,O 2 )phosphorus(V) (P(O 2 C 6 Cl 4 ) 3 - or TRISPHAT) anions. We characterize the high-spin-state relaxation using broadband ultrafast circular dichroism spectroscopy in the deep ultraviolet in combination with transient absorption and anisotropy measurements. We find that the high-spin-state decay is accompanied by ultrafast changes of its optical activity, reflecting the coupling to a symmetry-breaking torsional twisting mode, contrary to the commonly assumed picture. The diastereoselective ion pairing suppresses the vibrational population of the identified reaction coordinate, thereby achieving a fourfold increase of the high-spin-state lifetime. More generally, our results motivate the synthetic control of the torsional modes of iron(II) complexes as a complementary route to manipulate their spin-crossover dynamics.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- single molecule
- density functional theory
- transition metal
- ionic liquid
- molecular dynamics
- signaling pathway
- energy transfer
- randomized controlled trial
- drug delivery
- iron deficiency
- electron transfer
- artificial intelligence
- big data
- mass spectrometry
- molecular dynamics simulations
- raman spectroscopy
- solid state