Abstract

AbstractTransition metal (TM) complexes exhibit diverse structural and electronic properties. The properties of a TM complex can be tuned by modulating the ligand field strength (LFS) inflicted by its ligands. Current quantification of the LFS of a ligand is mainly derived from experimental measurements on a subset of highly symmetrical TM complexes and is limited in ligand scope. Herein, we report a data‐driven method to quantify the LFS of ligands assigned from experimental crystal structures of TM complexes. We first show that the experimental metal–ligand bond lengths of over 4,000 mononuclear Fe, Co, and Mn complexes form bimodal distributions. Using Gaussian fits on the bimodal distributions, each TM complex is assigned a spin state (SS) label. These SS labels can then be used to calculate the LFS of the ligands of the complexes. Using the obtained data‐driven LFS metric, we establish that a semi‐supervised deep generative model, junction tree variational autoencoder (JTVAE), can be employed to predict LFS values. Our model exhibits a mean absolute error (MAE) of 0.047 and root mean squared error of 0.072 on the training set. The model also allows the generation of novel ligands with desirable LFS values.

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