| Literature DB >> 29888918 |
Raphael M Jay1, Jesper Norell2, Sebastian Eckert1,3, Markus Hantschmann3, Martin Beye3,4, Brian Kennedy3, Wilson Quevedo3, William F Schlotter5, Georgi L Dakovski5, Michael P Minitti5, Matthias C Hoffmann5, Ankush Mitra5, Stefan P Moeller5, Dennis Nordlund6, Wenkai Zhang6, Huiyang W Liang6, Kristjan Kunnus6, Katharina Kubiček4, Simone A Techert4,7, Marcus Lundberg8,9, Philippe Wernet3, Kelly Gaffney6, Michael Odelius2, Alexander Föhlisch1,3.
Abstract
Soft X-ray spectroscopies are ideal probes of the local valence electronic structure of photocatalytically active metal sites. Here, we apply the selectivity of time-resolved resonant inelastic X-ray scattering at the iron L-edge to the transient charge distribution of an optically excited charge-transfer state in aqueous ferricyanide. Through comparison to steady-state spectra and quantum chemical calculations, the coupled effects of valence-shell closing and ligand-hole creation are experimentally and theoretically disentangled and described in terms of orbital occupancy, metal-ligand covalency, and ligand field splitting, thereby extending established steady-state concepts to the excited-state domain. π-Back-donation is found to be mainly determined by the metal site occupation, whereas the ligand hole instead influences σ-donation. Our results demonstrate how ultrafast resonant inelastic X-ray scattering can help characterize local charge distributions around catalytic metal centers in short-lived charge-transfer excited states, as a step toward future rationalization and tailoring of photocatalytic capabilities of transition-metal complexes.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29888918 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.8b01429
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Phys Chem Lett ISSN: 1948-7185 Impact factor: 6.475