Unusual electronic structures of square-planar iron-nitrosyl complexes
Abstract
Metal-nitrosyl species have attracted considerable attention due to their crucial roles in NO transformation chemistry. Although a plethora of {M–NO}n complexes have been reported, square-planar {M–NO}7 complexes remain unknown. This work describes the synthesis and characterization of an unprecedented square-planar {Fe–NO}7 species, [Fe(NO)(PCP)][BArF4] (3, PCP = 2,6-bis(di-tert-butylphosphinomethyl)phenyl), and its one-electron reduced {Fe–NO}8 congener, [Fe(NO)(PCP)] (4), both derived from a square-pyramidal {Fe–NO}7 precursor, [FeBr(NO)(PCP)] (2). Those complexes were thoroughly characterized using single-crystal XRD, Mössbauer, EPR as well as IR spectroscopies, coupled to wavefunction based ab initio calculations. Our results reveal that the electronic structures of 2 and 3 are best interpreted as an SFe = 3/2 ferric center antiferromagnetically coupled to an SNO = 1 NO− ligand, yielding an overall St = 1/2 ground state. Conversion of 3 to 4 is metal-centered reduction, and hence 4 is comprised of an SFe = 1 Fe(II) ion antiferromagnetically bonded to an SNO = 1 NO−, leading to a diamagnetic ground state. Complex 3 differs from all other {M–NO}7 systems in its ground level having an orbital two-fold near-degeneracy, manifested by gz ≫ 2 > gx,y, a spectroscopic signature that can be used to identify low-spin square-planar {M–NO}7 complexes.
- This article is part of the themed collection: 2026 Inorganic Chemistry Frontiers HOT Articles

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