Sensitivity of K beta mainline X-ray emission to structural dynamics in iron photosensitizer

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS(2023)

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摘要
Photochemistry and photophysics processes involve structures far from equilibrium. In these reactions, there is often strong coupling between nuclear and electronic degrees of freedom. For first-row transition metals, K beta X-ray emission spectroscopy (XES) is a sensitive probe of electronic structure due to the direct overlap between the valence orbitals and the 3p hole in the final state. Here the sensitivity of K beta mainline (K beta(1,3)) XES to structural dynamics is analyzed by simulating spectral changes along the excited state dynamics of an iron photosensitizer [Fe-II(bmip)(2)](2+) [bmip = 2,6-bis(3-methyl-imidazole-1-ylidine)-pyridine], using both restricted active space (RAS) multiconfigurational wavefunction theory and a one-electron orbital-energy approach in density-functional theory (1-DFT). Both methods predict a spectral blue-shift with increasing metal-ligand distance, which changes the emission intensity for any given detection energy. These results support the suggestion that the [Fe-II(bmip)(2)](2+) femtosecond K beta XES signal shows oscillations due to coherent wavepacket dynamics. Based on the RAS results, the sensitivity to structural dynamics is twice as high for K beta compared to K alpha, with the drawback of a lower signal-to-noise ratio. K beta sensitivity is favored by a larger spectral blue-shift with increasing metal-ligand distance and larger changes in spectral shape. Comparing the two simulations methods, 1-DFT predicts smaller energy shifts and lower sensitivity, likely due to missing final-state effects. The simulations can be used to design and interpret XES probes of non-equilibrium structures to gain mechanistic insights in photocatalysis.
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