Theoretical investigations of the electronic spectroscopy and ultrafast photochemistry of binary transition metal carbonyl complexes

This thesis is concerned with the electronic absorption spectroscopy and photochemical relaxation mechanisms of binary metal carbonyl complexes. These paradigm complexes exhibit a wide range of photoinduced vibronic coupling related phenomena that are only recently beginning to be understood with th...

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Main Author: McKinlay, Russell Graham
Other Authors: Paterson, Martin
Published: Heriot-Watt University 2011
Subjects:
541
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.575264
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5752642016-12-08T03:19:36ZTheoretical investigations of the electronic spectroscopy and ultrafast photochemistry of binary transition metal carbonyl complexesMcKinlay, Russell GrahamPaterson, Martin2011This thesis is concerned with the electronic absorption spectroscopy and photochemical relaxation mechanisms of binary metal carbonyl complexes. These paradigm complexes exhibit a wide range of photoinduced vibronic coupling related phenomena that are only recently beginning to be understood with the development of modern experimental and computational techniques. These experiments have shown that after irradiation using ultrafast (femtosecond) laser pulses an unsaturated photoproduct is produced, and possibly relaxes through a conical intersection at a Jahn-Teller active geometry, on the same ultrafast timescale. However while experiment can imply the presence of conical intersection, only theoretical methods can confirm this and accurately probe the appropriate part of the potential energy surfaces relevant to this mechanism. The accurate assignment of the electronic excited states of these carbonyls is also a matter of debate with different theoretical and experimental techniques applied to these systems over the years. The large density of excited states of different character within a small energy range and the high computational expense of studying transition metal complexes with highly correlated methods presents a considerable challenge to the theoretical chemist. The research presented in this thesis falls into two main parts, firstly the electronic excited states of the binary transition metal carbonyl complexes Fe(CO)5, Cr(CO)6 and Ni(CO)4 were studied with highly correlated coupled cluster methods as well as their one-photon and two-photon absorption spectra. These results were compared with previous experimental and theoretical results. The electronic excited states and one-photon absorption spectra were also studied for the group 7 mixed-metal bimetallic carbonyls (MnTc(CO)10, MnRe(CO)10 and TcRe(CO)10) for the first time with time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT), the ability of TD-DFT methods to describe charge-transfer states was also investigated here. The second part of this thesis focussed on the relaxation pathways of the 2Mn(CO)5 and 1Fe(CO)4 initial photoproducts of the photodissociation of Mn2(CO)10 and Fe(CO)5 respectively using CASSCF. Both were found to relax to their lowest energy state through a Jahn-Teller induced conical intersection at a Jahn-Teller active geometry in agreement with experimental observation.541Heriot-Watt Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.575264http://hdl.handle.net/10399/2513Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 541
spellingShingle 541
McKinlay, Russell Graham
Theoretical investigations of the electronic spectroscopy and ultrafast photochemistry of binary transition metal carbonyl complexes
description This thesis is concerned with the electronic absorption spectroscopy and photochemical relaxation mechanisms of binary metal carbonyl complexes. These paradigm complexes exhibit a wide range of photoinduced vibronic coupling related phenomena that are only recently beginning to be understood with the development of modern experimental and computational techniques. These experiments have shown that after irradiation using ultrafast (femtosecond) laser pulses an unsaturated photoproduct is produced, and possibly relaxes through a conical intersection at a Jahn-Teller active geometry, on the same ultrafast timescale. However while experiment can imply the presence of conical intersection, only theoretical methods can confirm this and accurately probe the appropriate part of the potential energy surfaces relevant to this mechanism. The accurate assignment of the electronic excited states of these carbonyls is also a matter of debate with different theoretical and experimental techniques applied to these systems over the years. The large density of excited states of different character within a small energy range and the high computational expense of studying transition metal complexes with highly correlated methods presents a considerable challenge to the theoretical chemist. The research presented in this thesis falls into two main parts, firstly the electronic excited states of the binary transition metal carbonyl complexes Fe(CO)5, Cr(CO)6 and Ni(CO)4 were studied with highly correlated coupled cluster methods as well as their one-photon and two-photon absorption spectra. These results were compared with previous experimental and theoretical results. The electronic excited states and one-photon absorption spectra were also studied for the group 7 mixed-metal bimetallic carbonyls (MnTc(CO)10, MnRe(CO)10 and TcRe(CO)10) for the first time with time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT), the ability of TD-DFT methods to describe charge-transfer states was also investigated here. The second part of this thesis focussed on the relaxation pathways of the 2Mn(CO)5 and 1Fe(CO)4 initial photoproducts of the photodissociation of Mn2(CO)10 and Fe(CO)5 respectively using CASSCF. Both were found to relax to their lowest energy state through a Jahn-Teller induced conical intersection at a Jahn-Teller active geometry in agreement with experimental observation.
author2 Paterson, Martin
author_facet Paterson, Martin
McKinlay, Russell Graham
author McKinlay, Russell Graham
author_sort McKinlay, Russell Graham
title Theoretical investigations of the electronic spectroscopy and ultrafast photochemistry of binary transition metal carbonyl complexes
title_short Theoretical investigations of the electronic spectroscopy and ultrafast photochemistry of binary transition metal carbonyl complexes
title_full Theoretical investigations of the electronic spectroscopy and ultrafast photochemistry of binary transition metal carbonyl complexes
title_fullStr Theoretical investigations of the electronic spectroscopy and ultrafast photochemistry of binary transition metal carbonyl complexes
title_full_unstemmed Theoretical investigations of the electronic spectroscopy and ultrafast photochemistry of binary transition metal carbonyl complexes
title_sort theoretical investigations of the electronic spectroscopy and ultrafast photochemistry of binary transition metal carbonyl complexes
publisher Heriot-Watt University
publishDate 2011
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.575264
work_keys_str_mv AT mckinlayrussellgraham theoreticalinvestigationsoftheelectronicspectroscopyandultrafastphotochemistryofbinarytransitionmetalcarbonylcomplexes
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