Abstract
X-ray Absorption Near-Edge Structure (XANES) spectroscopy is a powerful tool to reveal key structural and electronic features of isolated catalytic sites, yet insights into molecular structure and more detailed orbital analysis through a combination of experimental and computed XANES analysis are necessary for accurate interpretation of the spectra, especially when significant heterogeneity exits among the catalytic sites. Herein, we present an integrated computational and experimental strategy to determine both primary and secondary bonding interactions within the XANES pre-edge region for organovanadium complexes, which was developed using a series of well-defined molecular vanadium complexes and then applied to the characterization of a supported organovanadium olefin hydrogenation catalyst. Time-dependent density functional theory is used to predict the energy of pre-edge XANES features for a series of vanadium complexes with a variety of oxidation states and local coordination environments. A calibration scheme incorporating different density functionals and basis sets is established, resulting in an optimized scheme that accurately predicts pre-edge energies with a mean absolute error of 0.40 eV. Second-shell coordination (e.g., V---V) effects within XANES are identified through the analysis of the computed dominant orbital contributions for multi-vanadium complexes. Orbital analysis also provided confirmation that the vanadium-hydride formation combined with the heterogeneity of the catalytic active species in olefin hydrogenation caused the energy shift and broadening of the pre-edge peak after hydrogen treatment of the silica-supported organovanadium pre-catalyst. This work further elucidates computational XANES simulations and techniques potentially guiding characterization in surface organometallic chemistry.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplemental Information for Integrated Experimental and Computational K-edge XANES Analysis of Vanadium Catalysts
Description
Experimental XAS and Computational Methods, XANES experiments, DFT Functional analysis, Basis set analysis, effect of exact exchange, structures, and experimental details.
Actions