Abstract

The gas-phase ionization energies of a series of Mo2(DPhF)4 paddlewheel complexes (DPhF is the N,N′-diphenylformamidinate anion with p-CH3, p-Cl, m-Cl, p-CF3, or m-CF3 phenyl substituents) have been measured by ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy (UPS) and compared with the solution oxidation potentials measured by cyclic voltammetry (CV) reported by Ren and coworkers. A linear relationship was found between the gas-phase ionization energies and the solution oxidation potentials. Density functional theory (DFT) computations clarify the individual electronic and thermodynamic factors that contribute to the correlation. The metal–metal delta bond electron energy is the largest factor in determining the solution oxidation potential. The substituents shift the metal–metal orbital energies by changing the through-space field potential at the metals rather than by an inductive change in charge at the metals or orbital overlap effects. The cation solvation energies determine the extent that the potential shifts are attenuated in solution. The results show that substituent field effects and solvation have major roles in determining the dimetal redox chemistry even when the dimetal unit is protected from direct interaction with the substituent and the solvent.

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