4.7 Article

High-Pressure and Theoretical Studies Reveal Significant Differences in the Electronic Structure and Bonding of Magnesium, Zinc, and Nickel Ions in Metalloporphyrinoids

Journal

INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 53, Issue 16, Pages 8473-8484

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ic501029b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Higher Education [N N204 439640]
  2. Polish National Science Centre [DEC-2012/05/B/ST5/00389]
  3. Foundation for Polish Science [TEAM/2010-5/3]
  4. Marian Smoluchowski Krakow Research Consortium, a Leading National Research Centre KNOW - Ministry of Science and Higher Education
  5. European Union [POIG.02.01.00-12-064/08]
  6. [MNiSW/IBM_BC_HS21/PAN/033/2012]

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High pressure in combination with optical spectroscopy was used to gain insights into the interactions between Mg2+, Zn2+, and Ni2+ ions and macrocyclic ligands of porphyrinoid type. In parallel, the central metal ion-macrocycle bonding was investigated using theoretical approaches. The symmetry properties of the orbitals participating in this bonding were analyzed, and pigment geometries and pressure/ligation effects were computed within DFT. Bacteriopheophytin a was applied as both a model chelator and a highly specific spectroscopic probe. The analysis of solvent and pressure effects on the spectral properties of the model Mg2+, Zn2+, and Ni2+ complexes with bacteriopheophytin a shows that various chemical bonds are formed in the central pocket, depending on the valence configuration of the central metal ion. In addition, the character of this bonding depends on symmetry of the macrocyclic system. Since in most cases it is not coordinative bonding, these results challenge the conventional view of metal ion bonding in such complexes. In (labile) complexes with the main group metals, the metal ion macrocycle interaction is mostly electrostatic. Significantly, water molecules are not preferred as a second axial ligand in such complexes, mainly due to the entropic constraints. The metal ions with a closed d shell may form (stable) complexes with the macrocycle via classical coordination bonds, engaging their p and s orbitals. Transition metals, due to the unfilled d shell, do form much more stable complexes, because of strong bonding via both coordination and covalent interactions. These conclusions are confirmed by DFT computations and theoretical considerations, which altogether provide the basis to propose a consistent and general mechanism of how the central metal ion and its interactions with the core nitrogens govern the physicochemical properties of metalloporphyrinoids.

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