Litcius/Paper detail

From the Free Ligand to the Transition Metal Complex: FeEDTA<sup>–</sup>Formation Seen at Ligand K-Edges

Sebastian Eckert, Eric J. Mascarenhas, Rolf Mitzner, Raphael M. Jay, Annette Pietzsch, Mattis Fondell, Vinícius Vaz da Cruz, Alexander Föhlisch

2022Inorganic Chemistry28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chelating agents are an integral part of transition metal complex chemistry with broad biological and industrial relevance. The hexadentate chelating agent ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) has the capability to bind to metal ions at its two nitrogen and four of its carboxylate oxygen sites. We use resonant inelastic X-ray scattering at the 1s absorption edge of the aforementioned elements in EDTA and the iron(III)-EDTA complex to investigate the impact of the metal-ligand bond formation on the electronic structure of EDTA. Frontier orbital distortions, occupation changes, and energy shifts through metal-ligand bond formation are probed through distinct spectroscopic signatures.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryLigand (biochemistry)ChelationCarboxylateEthylenediaminetetraacetic acidMetalTransition metalCrystallographyInorganic chemistryStereochemistryPhotochemistryOrganic chemistryCatalysisBiochemistryReceptorX-ray Spectroscopy and Fluorescence AnalysisElectron and X-Ray Spectroscopy TechniquesX-ray Diffraction in Crystallography