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The Ligand Field of the Azido Ligand: Insights into Bonding Parameters and Magnetic Anisotropy in a Co(II)–Azido Complex

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TLDR
Application of the so-called N-electron valence second-order perturbation theory (NEVPT2) resulted in excellent agreement between experimental and computed energies of low-lying d-d transitions, and the N3(-) ligand is shown to behave as a strong σ and π donor.
Abstract
The azido ligand is one of the most investigated ligands in magnetochemistry. Despite its importance, not much is known about the ligand field of the azido ligand and its influence on magnetic anisotropy. Here we present the electronic structure of a novel five-coordinate Co(II)-azido complex (1), which has been characterized experimentally (magnetically and by electronic d-d absorption spectroscopy) and theoretically (by means of multireference electronic structure methods). Static and dynamic magnetic data on 1 have been collected, and the latter demonstrate slow relaxation of the magnetization in an applied external magnetic field of H = 3000 Oe. The zero-field splitting parameters deduced from static susceptibility and magnetizations (D = -10.7 cm(-1), E/D = 0.22) are in excellent agreement with the value of D inferred from an Arrhenius plot of the magnetic relaxation time versus the temperature. Application of the so-called N-electron valence second-order perturbation theory (NEVPT2) resulted in excellent agreement between experimental and computed energies of low-lying d-d transitions. Calculations were performed on 1 and a related four-coordinate Co(II)-azido complex lacking a fifth axial ligand (2). On the basis of these results and contrary to previous suggestions, the N3(-) ligand is shown to behave as a strong σ and π donor. Magnetostructural correlations show a strong increase in the negative D with increasing Lewis basicity (shortening of the Co-N bond distances) of the axial ligand on the N3(-) site. The effect on the change in sign of D in going from four-coordinate Co(II) (positive D) to five-coordinate Co(II) (negative D) is discussed in the light of the bonding scheme derived from ligand field analysis of the ab initio results.

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The ORCA quantum chemistry program package

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A four-coordinate cobalt(II) single-ion magnet with coercivity and a very high energy barrier

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Magnetic anisotropy in two- to eight-coordinated transition–metal complexes: Recent developments in molecular magnetism

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the magnetic anisotropy of mononuclear transition metal complexes in various coordination environments is presented, focusing on studies performed to determine slow magnetic relaxation processes, i.e., single-molecule magnet (SMM) behavior.
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Single Ion Magnets from 3d to 5f: Developments and Strategies.

TL;DR: In this review, the developments of SIMs with different metal centres are summarized, as well as the possible strategies of ligand field design.
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Metal Complexes of Click‐Derived Triazoles and Mesoionic Carbenes: Electron Transfer, Photochemistry, Magnetic Bistability, and Catalysis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present recent developments in this field with examples of some selected ligands, developed in their group over the past few years, and focus is on systems developed in our group.
References
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A short history of SHELX

TL;DR: This paper could serve as a general literature citation when one or more of the open-source SH ELX programs (and the Bruker AXS version SHELXTL) are employed in the course of a crystal-structure determination.
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A consistent and accurate ab initio parametrization of density functional dispersion correction (DFT-D) for the 94 elements H-Pu

TL;DR: The revised DFT-D method is proposed as a general tool for the computation of the dispersion energy in molecules and solids of any kind with DFT and related (low-cost) electronic structure methods for large systems.
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TL;DR: A large set of more than 300 molecules representing all elements-except lanthanides-in their common oxidation states was used to assess the quality of the bases all across the periodic table, and recommendations are given which type of basis set is used best for a certain level of theory and a desired quality of results.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of the damping function in dispersion corrected density functional theory

TL;DR: It is shown by an extensive benchmark on molecular energy data that the mathematical form of the damping function in DFT‐D methods has only a minor impact on the quality of the results and BJ‐damping seems to provide a physically correct short‐range behavior of correlation/dispersion even with unmodified standard functionals.
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The ORCA program system

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