Carpio-Martínez P, Ramírez-Palma DI, Cortés-Guzmán F. Spin Energy Contributions of the Kinetic Energy Density in the Stabilization of the Metal-Ligand Interactions.
J Phys Chem A 2024;
128:5158-5165. [PMID:
38904331 PMCID:
PMC11229002 DOI:
10.1021/acs.jpca.4c03334]
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Abstract
The kinetic energy (KE) density plays an essential role in the stabilization mechanism of covalent, polar covalent, and ionic bondings; however, its role in metal-ligand bindings remains unclear. In a recent work, the energetic contributions of the spin densities α and β were studied to explain the geometrical characteristics of a series of metal-ligand complexes. Notably, the KE density was found to modulate/stabilize the spin components of the intra-atomic nucleus-electron interactions within the metal in the complex. Here, we investigate the topographic properties of the spin components of the KE density for a family of high-spin hexa-aquo complexes ([M(H2O)6]2+) to shed light on the stabilization of the metal-ligand interaction. We compute the Lagrangian, G(r), and Hamiltonian, K(r), KE densities and analyze the evolution of its spin components in the formation of two metal-ligand coordination complexes. We study Kα/β(r) along the metal-oxygen (M-O) internuclear axis as a function of the metal. Our results indicate that K(r) is a more distance-sensitive quantity compared to G(r) as it displays topographic features at larger M-O distances. Furthermore, K(r) allows one to identify the predominant interaction mechanism in the complexes.
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