A “non-magnetic” triplet bismuthinidene enabled by relativity
Preprint 2022 English
Authors
YP
Yue Pang
NN
Nils Nöthling
ML
Markus Leutzsch
Abstract
1 min read
Isolation and stabilization of main group diradical species have posed a synthetic challenge over the years due to their intrinsic high reactivity. Herein we report on a large-scale synthesis and isolation of a mono-coordinate bismuthinidene featuring a rigid and bulky ligand, which protects the Bi(I) center. The compound was characterized by its unique spectroscopic features (UV-vis and NMR), but more prominently, by its magnetic properties. Multiconfigurational quantum chemical calculations predict the ground state of the compound to be dominated by a spin-triplet. Further support for this electronic structure description was obtained through correlation of theory to experimental XRD, XAS, and UV-Vis data. However, all magnetic measurements (EPR, NMR and SQUID) point to a diamagnetic compound. This apparent discrepancy can be explained by an extremely large spin-orbit coupling (SOC) that leads to an unprecedented zero-field splitting of more than 8000 cm‒1, thus leaving a MS = 0 magnetic sublevel thermally isolated in the electronic ground state. The extremely large SOC effect is a result of the low-coordination number of the bismuth center in interplay with its heavy element nature.
Yue Pang, Nils Nöthling, Markus Leutzsch, Liqun Kang, Eckhard Bill, Maurice van Gastel, Edward J. Reijerse, Richard Goddard, Lucas Wagner, Daniel J. SantaLucia, Serena DeBeer, Frank Neese, Josep Cornellà
Martin Keilwerth, Johannes Hohenberger, Frank W. Heinemann, Jörg Sutter, Andreas Scheurer, Huayi Fang, Eckhard Bill, Frank Neese, Shengfa Ye, Karsten Meyer
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