Abstract
Metal-EDTA complexes commonly exist as biological redox reagents. We have generated a series of such complexes, [EDTA·M(iii)]- (M = Al, Sc, V-Co), via electrospray ionization and characterized them by cryogenic mass-selected negative ion photoelectron spectroscopy (NIPES) and quantum chemical computations. Experiments clearly revealed one more spectral band at low electron binding energy for transition metal complexes with d electrons (M = V-Co) compared to those without d electrons (M = Al and Sc). Quantum chemical calculations suggested that all of the metal complexes possess hexacoordinated metal-ligand binding motifs, from which the calculated adiabatic/vertical detachment energy (ADE/VDE) and band gaps are in good agreement with experimental values. Direct spectrum and electronic structure analyses indicted that [EDTA·V(iii)]- can be easily oxidized to [EDTA·V(iv)] with the smallest ADE/VDE of 3.95/4.40 eV among these metal complexes, but further oxidation is hindered by the existence of a 2.30 eV band gap, a fact that accords with the special redox behavior of vanadium-containing species in biological cells. Spin density and molecular orbital analyses reveal that [EDTA·V(iii)]- was overwhelmingly detached from the vanadium atom, in stark contrast to [EDTA·Sc(iii)/Al(iii)]-, where the detachment occurred from the EDTA ligand. For all other metal complex anions, from M = Cr to Co, the detachment process is derived from contributions from both the metal and ligand. The intrinsic electronic and geometric structures of these complexes, obtained in this work, provide a molecular foundation to better understand their redox chemistries and specific metal bindings in condensed phases and biological cells.
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