TY - JOUR
T1 - Building a bridge between coordination compounds and clusters
T2 - Bonding analysis of the icosahedral molecules [M(ER)12] (M = Cr, Mo, W; E = Zn, Cd, Hg)
AU - Von Hopffgarten, Moritz
AU - Frenking, Gernot
PY - 2011/11/17
Y1 - 2011/11/17
N2 - The bonding situation of the icosahedral compounds [M(EH)12] (M = Cr, Mo, W; E = Zn, Cd, Hg), which are model systems for the isolated species [Mo(ZnCp*)3(ZnMe)9] possessing the coordination number 12 at the central atom M, have been analyzed with a variety of charge and energy decomposition methods (AIM, EDA-NOCV, WBI, MO). The results give a coherent picture of the electronic structure and the nature of the interatomic interactions. The compounds [M(EH)12] are transition metal complexes that possess 12 M-EH radial bond paths (AIM) that can be described as 6 three-center two-electron bonds (MO). The radial M-EH bonds come from the electron sharing interactions mainly between the singly occupied valence s and d AOs of the central atom M and the singly occupied EH valence orbitals (MO, EDA-NOCV). The orbital interactions provide ∼42% of the total attraction, while the electrostatic attraction contributes ∼58% to the metal-ligand bonding (EDA-NOCV). There is a weak peripheral E-E bonding in [M(EH) 12] that explains the unusually high coordination number (MO). The peripheral bonding leads for some compounds [M(EH)12] to the emergence of E-E bond paths, while in others it does not (AIM). The relative strength of the radial and peripheral bonding in [Al13]- and [Pt@Pb12]2- is clearly different from the situation in [M(EH)12], which supports the assignments of the former species as cluster compounds or inclusion compounds (MO, WBI). The bonding situation in [WAu12] is similar to that in [M(EH)12].
AB - The bonding situation of the icosahedral compounds [M(EH)12] (M = Cr, Mo, W; E = Zn, Cd, Hg), which are model systems for the isolated species [Mo(ZnCp*)3(ZnMe)9] possessing the coordination number 12 at the central atom M, have been analyzed with a variety of charge and energy decomposition methods (AIM, EDA-NOCV, WBI, MO). The results give a coherent picture of the electronic structure and the nature of the interatomic interactions. The compounds [M(EH)12] are transition metal complexes that possess 12 M-EH radial bond paths (AIM) that can be described as 6 three-center two-electron bonds (MO). The radial M-EH bonds come from the electron sharing interactions mainly between the singly occupied valence s and d AOs of the central atom M and the singly occupied EH valence orbitals (MO, EDA-NOCV). The orbital interactions provide ∼42% of the total attraction, while the electrostatic attraction contributes ∼58% to the metal-ligand bonding (EDA-NOCV). There is a weak peripheral E-E bonding in [M(EH) 12] that explains the unusually high coordination number (MO). The peripheral bonding leads for some compounds [M(EH)12] to the emergence of E-E bond paths, while in others it does not (AIM). The relative strength of the radial and peripheral bonding in [Al13]- and [Pt@Pb12]2- is clearly different from the situation in [M(EH)12], which supports the assignments of the former species as cluster compounds or inclusion compounds (MO, WBI). The bonding situation in [WAu12] is similar to that in [M(EH)12].
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=80855129497&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/jp2038762
DO - 10.1021/jp2038762
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:80855129497
SN - 1089-5639
VL - 115
SP - 12758
EP - 12768
JO - Journal of Physical Chemistry A
JF - Journal of Physical Chemistry A
IS - 45
ER -