Abstract

The strength of hydrogen bonds has been investigated in various dinuclear diazene FeII, FeIII, and RuII complexes by use of the recently developed shared-electron number approach. Hydrogen bonding in these compounds plays an essential role in view of designing a model system for nitrogenase activity. The general conclusions for iron-sulfur complexes are: hydrogen bonds can stabilize diazene by at least 20% of the total coordination energy; the strength of the hydrogen bonds can be directly controlled through the hydrogen-sulfur bond length; reducing FeIII centers to FeII can double the hydrogen bond energy.

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