Abstract

The photodissociation dynamics of the heteroleptic Co(CO)3NO complex were investigated in the metal-to-carbonyl (CO) ligand charge-transfer band to compare the reactivity of the CO and nitrosyl (NO) ligands. The final state distributions of both the CO and NO fragments were measured using resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionization (REMPI) spectroscopy and velocity-map ion-imaging. The primary CO photofragment was differentiated from the secondary fragments of the subsequent unimolecular decomposition of coordinatively unsaturated intermediates by comparing the momentum distributions. The internal energy of the Co(CO)2NO intermediate was sufficiently high (≥348 kJ/mol) to be generated in the electronic excited state, indicating the occurrence of the primary CO elimination on an excited state. The NO fragments exhibited two velocity components. The analysis of the final state distributions suggested that the higher- and lower-kinetic-energy components originated from the direct primary elimination and sequential elimination, respectively. The direct photoelimination through a transiently bent ligand conformation was illustrated on the basis of a two-dimensional REMPI approach and time-dependent density functional theory calculations. The present results of both ligands demonstrate the correlation between elimination mechanisms and possible ligand conformations in the electronic excited state.

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