Abstract

The manganese-oxo "cubane" core complex Mn(4)O(4)L(1)(6) (1, L(1) = Ph(2)PO(2-)), a partial model of the photosynthetic water oxidation site, was shown previously to undergo photodissociation in the gas phase by releasing one phosphinate anion, an O(2) molecule, and the intact butterfly core cation (Mn(4)O(2)L(1)(5+)). Herein, we investigate the photochemistry and electronic structure of a series of manganese-oxo cubane complexes: [Mn(4)O(4)L(2)(6)] (2), 1(+)(ClO(4-)), 2(+)(ClO(4-)), and Mn(4)O(3)(OH)L(1)(6) (1H). We report the atomic structure of [Mn(4)O(4)L(2)(6)](ClO(4)), 2(+)(ClO(4-)) [L(2) = (4-MeOPh)(2)PO(2-)]. UV photoexcitation of a charge-transfer band dissociates one phosphinate, two core oxygen atoms, and the Mn(4)O(2)L(5)(+) butterfly as the dominant (or exclusive) photoreaction of all cubane derivatives in the gas phase, with relative yields: 1H >> 2 > 1 > 2(+) > 1(+). The photodissociation yield increases upon (1) reducing the core oxidation state by hydrogenation of a corner oxo (1H), (2) increasing the electron donation from the phosphinate ligand (L(2)), and (3) reducing the net charge from +1 to 0. The experimental Mn-O bond lengths and Mn-O bond strengths and the calculated ligand binding energy explain these trends in terms of weaker binding of phosphinate L(2) versus L(1) by 14.7 kcal/mol and stronger Mn-(mu(3)-O)(core) bonds in the oxidized complexes 2(+) and 1(+) versus 2 and 1. The calculated electronic structure accounts for these trends in terms of the binding energy and antibonding Mn-O(core) and Mn-O'(ligand) character of the degenerate highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO), including (1) energetic destabilization of the HOMO of 2 relative to 1 by 0.75 eV and (2) depopulation of the antibonding HOMO and increased ionic binding in 1(+) and 2(+) versus 1 and 2.

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