Comprehensive Experimental and Computational Spectroscopic Study of Hexacyanoferrate Complexes in Water: From Infrared to X‑ray Wavelengths

We present a joint experimental and computational study of the hexacyanoferrate aqueous complexes at equilibrium in the 250 meV to 7.15 keV regime. The experiments and the computations include the vibrational spectroscopy of the cyanide ligands, the valence electronic absorption spectra, and Fe 1s c...

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Published inThe journal of physical chemistry. B Vol. 122; no. 19; pp. 5075 - 5086
Main Authors Ross, Matthew, Andersen, Amity, Fox, Zachary W, Zhang, Yu, Hong, Kiryong, Lee, Jae-Hyuk, Cordones, Amy, March, Anne Marie, Doumy, Gilles, Southworth, Stephen H, Marcus, Matthew A, Schoenlein, Robert W, Mukamel, Shaul, Govind, Niranjan, Khalil, Munira
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 17.05.2018
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Summary:We present a joint experimental and computational study of the hexacyanoferrate aqueous complexes at equilibrium in the 250 meV to 7.15 keV regime. The experiments and the computations include the vibrational spectroscopy of the cyanide ligands, the valence electronic absorption spectra, and Fe 1s core hole spectra using element-specific-resonant X-ray absorption and emission techniques. Density functional theory-based quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics molecular dynamics simulations are performed to generate explicit solute–solvent configurations, which serve as inputs for the spectroscopy calculations of the experiments spanning the IR to X-ray wavelengths. The spectroscopy simulations are performed at the same level of theory across this large energy window, which allows for a systematic comparison of the effects of explicit solute–solvent interactions in the vibrational, valence electronic, and core-level spectra of hexacyanoferrate complexes in water. Although the spectroscopy of hexacyanoferrate complexes in solution has been the subject of several studies, most of the previous works have focused on a narrow energy window and have not accounted for explicit solute–solvent interactions in their spectroscopy simulations. In this work, we focus our analysis on identifying how the local solvation environment around the hexacyanoferrate complexes influences the intensity and line shape of specific spectroscopic features in the UV/vis, X-ray absorption, and valence-to-core X-ray emission spectra. The identification of these features and their relationship to solute–solvent interactions is important because hexacyanoferrate complexes serve as model systems for understanding the photochemistry and photophysics of a large class of Fe­(II) and Fe­(III) complexes in solution.
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USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES)
AC02-06CH11357; AC02-05CH11231
ISSN:1520-6106
1520-5207
1520-5207
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcb.7b12532