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Femtosecond X‑ray Spectroscopy Directly Quantifies Transient Excited-State Mixed Valency
- Liekhus-Schmaltz, Chelsea;
- Fox, Zachary W;
- Andersen, Amity;
- Kjaer, Kasper S;
- Alonso-Mori, Roberto;
- Biasin, Elisa;
- Carlstad, Julia;
- Chollet, Matthieu;
- Gaynor, James D;
- Glownia, James M;
- Hong, Kiryong;
- Kroll, Thomas;
- Lee, Jae Hyuk;
- Poulter, Benjamin I;
- Reinhard, Marco;
- Sokaras, Dimosthenis;
- Zhang, Yu;
- Doumy, Gilles;
- March, Anne Marie;
- Southworth, Stephen H;
- Mukamel, Shaul;
- Cordones, Amy A;
- Schoenlein, Robert W;
- Govind, Niranjan;
- Khalil, Munira
- et al.
Abstract
Quantifying charge delocalization associated with short-lived photoexcited states of molecular complexes in solution remains experimentally challenging, requiring local element specific femtosecond experimental probes of time-evolving electron transfer. In this study, we quantify the evolving valence hole charge distribution in the photoexcited charge transfer state of a prototypical mixed valence bimetallic iron-ruthenium complex, [(CN)5FeIICNRuIII(NH3)5]-, in water by combining femtosecond X-ray spectroscopy measurements with time-dependent density functional theory calculations of the excited-state dynamics. We estimate the valence hole charge that accumulated at the Fe atom to be 0.6 ± 0.2, resulting from excited-state metal-to-metal charge transfer, on an ∼60 fs time scale. Our combined experimental and computational approach provides a spectroscopic ruler for quantifying excited-state valency in solvated complexes.
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