Photoinduced bond oscillations in ironpentacarbonyl give delayed synchronous bursts of carbonmonoxide release.
Ambar BanerjeeMichael R CoatesMarkus KowalewskiHampus WikmarkRaphael M JayPhilippe WernetMichael OdeliusPublished in: Nature communications (2022)
Early excited state dynamics in the photodissociation of transition metal carbonyls determines the chemical nature of short-lived catalytically active reaction intermediates. However, time-resolved experiments have not yet revealed mechanistic details in the sub-picosecond regime. Hence, in this study the photoexcitation of ironpentacarbonyl Fe(CO) 5 is simulated with semi-classical excited state molecular dynamics. We find that the bright metal-to-ligand charge-transfer (MLCT) transition induces synchronous Fe-C oscillations in the trigonal bipyramidal complex leading to periodically reoccurring release of predominantly axial CO. Metaphorically the photoactivated Fe(CO) 5 acts as a CO geyser, as a result of dynamics in the potential energy landscape of the axial Fe-C distances and non-adiabatic transitions between manifolds of bound MLCT and dissociative metal-centered (MC) excited states. The predominant release of axial CO ligands and delayed release of equatorial CO ligands are explained in a unified mechanism based on the σ * (Fe-C) anti-bonding character of the receiving orbital in the dissociative MC states.