Issue 27, 2022

Simulating the solvation structure of low- and high-spin [Fe(bpy)3]2+: long-range dispersion and many-body effects

Abstract

When characterizing transition metal complexes and their functionalities, the importance of including the solvent as an active participant is becoming more and more apparent. Whereas many studies have evaluated long-range dispersion effects inside organic molecules and organometallics, less is known about their role in solvation. Here, we have analysed the components within solute–solvent and solvent–solvent interactions of one of the most studied iron-based photoswitch model systems, in two spin states. We find that long-range dispersion effects modulate the coordination significantly, and that this is accurately captured by density functional theory models including dispersion corrections. We furthermore correlate gas-phase relaxed complex-water clusters to thermally averaged molecular densities. This shows how the gas-phase interactions translate to solution structure, quantified through 3D molecular densities, angular distributions, and radial distribution functions. We show that finite-size simulation cells can cause the radial distribution functions to have artificially enlarged amplitudes. Finally, we quantify the effects of many-body interactions within the solvent shells, and find that almost a fifth of the total interaction energy of the solute–shell system in the high-spin state comes from many-body contributions, which cannot be captured by by pair-wise additive force field methods.

Graphical abstract: Simulating the solvation structure of low- and high-spin [Fe(bpy)3]2+: long-range dispersion and many-body effects

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Feb 2022
Accepted
18 Jun 2022
First published
20 Jun 2022

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2022,24, 16655-16670

Simulating the solvation structure of low- and high-spin [Fe(bpy)3]2+: long-range dispersion and many-body effects

H. Zulfikri, M. Pápai and A. O. Dohn, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2022, 24, 16655 DOI: 10.1039/D2CP00892K

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