Investigations on the structures and bonding properties of metal carbonyl compounds provide fundamental understandings on the origin of small-molecule activations. Herein, the geometry and bonding trends of a series of isovalent metal oxocarbonyl complexes OM(η-CO) (M = Cr, Mo, W, Nd, and U) were studied by combined matrix-isolation infrared spectroscopy and advanced quantum chemical calculations. The title complexes present red shift of C-O stretching bands in the range from 122 to 244 cm, indicating the difference of CO activation ability for the series of isovalent metal dioxides. Density functional theory calculations predict T-shaped structures with a symmetry for all the title molecules. ONd(η-CO) bears little resemblance to the other complexes in bonding characters because of the weak interactions between the NdO and CO moiety. For the other complexes, natural localized molecular orbital analysis reveals a gradual increase of covalent character in M-CO bonds along the metal series Cr → Mo → W→ U. Energy decomposition analysis with natural orbitals for chemical valence calculations demonstrates that the M-CO bonding patterns conform to the conventional Dewar-Chatt-Duncanson motif. The contributions from orbital interactions in total attractions increase from Cr (41.7%) to U (52.7%). The breakdown of the orbital term into pairwise interactions shows that contributions of the M ← CO σ donation decrease from Cr (59.2%) to U (28.4%), while the M → CO π* backdonation increases significantly from Cr (23.8%) to U (67.3%). The more effective overlap and the better energy matching of U 5f and U 6d valence orbitals with CO π* orbitals result in much stronger U → CO π backdonation than the other metal elements.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.1c03257 | DOI Listing |
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