The Role of Solvent Reorganization Dynamics in Electron-Transfer Processes. Theory-Experiment Comparisons for Electrochemical and Homogeneous Electron Exchange Involving Metallocene Redox Couples
Abstract
Electrochemical Rate Constants and Activation Parameters are reported for the electron exchange of five metallocene couples and dibenzenechromium (I)/ (O) in eight solvents at mercury electrodes. The solvents (acetonitrile, acetone, methylene chloride, formamide, N-methylformamide, N,N'- dimethylformamide, dimethylsulfoxide, and benzonitrile) were chosen so to provide substantial variations in their dynamical as well as dielectric properties. The metallocene couples are of the form M(Cp)2(+/o), where M = Fe, Co, or Mn, and Cp = cyclopentadiene or pentamethylcyclopentadiene. The inner- shell (i.e., bond distortional) barriers are calculated for the metallocene and arene couples from bond-distance and vibrational data to be small (< or approx, 0.25 kcal/mol) yet metal-dependent. Detailed comparisons of the observed solvent-dependent kinetics are made with the rate parameters calculated from contemporary theoretical treatments of outer-sphere electron transfer. Considerably better agreement between the experimental and theoretical kinetic parameters was obtained when the latter take into account the influence of solvent friction upon the barrier-crossing frequency. These results indicate that the conventional transition-state theory may not apply to electron-transfer reactions where the free-energy barrier is due chiefly to solvent reorganization, at least in 'high friction' media where concerted solvent relaxation is slow.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Aug 01, 1985
- Accession Number
- ADA160034
Entities
People
- David F. Milner
- Michael J. Weaver
- Thomas Gennett
Organizations
- Purdue University