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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(38): 15046-15057, 2019 09 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31480847

RESUMEN

Herein we quantitatively investigate how metal ion Lewis acidity and steric properties influence the kinetics and thermodynamics of dioxygen binding versus release from structurally analogous Mn-O2 complexes, as well as the barrier to Mn peroxo O-O bond cleavage, and the reactivity of Mn oxo intermediates. Previously we demonstrated that the steric and electronic properties of MnIII-OOR complexes containing N-heterocyclic (NAr) ligand scaffolds can have a dramatic influence on alkylperoxo O-O bond lengths and the barrier to alkylperoxo O-O bond cleavage. Herein, we examine the dioxygen reactivity of a new MnII complex containing a more electron-rich, less sterically demanding NAr ligand scaffold, and compare it with previously reported MnII complexes. Dioxygen binding is shown to be reversible with complexes containing the more electron-rich metal ions. The kinetic barrier to O2 binding and peroxo O-O bond cleavage is shown to correlate with redox potentials, as well as the steric properties of the supporting NAr ligands. The reaction landscape for the dioxygen chemistry of the more electron-rich complexes is shown to be relatively flat. A total of four intermediates, including a superoxo and peroxo species, are observed with the most electron-rich complex. Two new intermediates are shown to form following the peroxo, which are capable of cleaving strong X-H bonds. In the absence of a sacrificial H atom donor, solvent, or ligand, serves as a source of H atoms. With TEMPOH as sacrificial H atom donor, a deuterium isotope effect is observed (kH/kD = 3.5), implicating a hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) mechanism. With 1,4-cyclohexadiene, 0.5 equiv of benzene is produced prior to the formation of an EPR detected MnIIIMnIV bimetallic species, and 0.5 equiv after its formation.

2.
Inorg Chem ; 58(19): 13382-13393, 2019 Oct 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31513388

RESUMEN

Oxoiron(IV) is a common catalytic byproduct observed in the oxidation of alkenes by the combination of H2O2 and nonheme iron catalysts including complex 1, FeIIPDP* (where PDP* = bis(3,5-dimethyl-4-methoxypyridyl-2-methyl)-(R,R)-2,2'-bipyrrolidine). The oxoiron(IV) species have been proposed to arise by O-O homolysis of the peroxyiron(III) or acylperoxyiron(III) intermediates formed during the presumed FeIII-FeV catalytic cycle and have generally been regarded as off-pathway. We generated complex 1IV═O (λmax = 730 nm, ε = 350 M-1 cm-1) directly from 1 and an oxygen atom donor IBXi-Pr (isopropyl 2-iodoxybenzoate) in acetonitrile in the temperature range from -35 to +25 °C under stopped-flow conditions. Species 1IV═O is metastable (half-life of 2.0 min at +25 °C), and its decay is accelerated in the presence of organic substrates such as thioanisole, alkenes, benzene, and cyclohexane. The reaction with cyclohexane-d12 is significantly slower (KIE = 4.9 ± 0.4), suggesting that a hydrogen atom transfer to 1IV═O is the rate limiting step. With benzene-d6, no significant isotope effect is observed (KIE = 1.0 ± 0.2), but UV-vis spectra show the concomitant formation of an intense 580 nm band likely due to the Fe(III)-phenolate chromophore, suggesting an electrophilic attack of 1IV═O on the aromatic system of benzene. Treatment of 1IV═O with H2O2 resulted in rapid decay of its 730 nm visible band (k = 102.6 ± 4.6 M-1 s-1 at -20 °C), most likely occurring by a hydrogen atom transfer from H2O2. In the presence of excess H2O2, the oxoiron(IV) is transformed into peroxyiron(III), as seen from the formation of a characteristic 550 nm visible band and geff = 2.22, 2.16, and 1.96 electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy signals. Reductively formed 1III-OOH was able to re-enter the catalytic cycle of alkene epoxidation by H2O2, albeit with lower yields versus those of oxidatively formed (i.e., 1 + H2O2) peroxyiron(III) owing to a loss of ca. 40% active iron. As such, the oxoiron(IV) species can be reintroduced to the catalytic cycle with extra H2O2, acting as an iron reservoir. Alternatively, peroxycarboxylic acids, which have a stronger O-H bond dissociation energy, do not reduce 1IV═O, ensuring that more oxidant is productively employed in substrate oxidation. While this reaction with H2O2 may occur for other nonheme oxoiron(IV) complexes, the only previously reported examples are 3IV═O and 4IV═O, which are reduced by hydrogen peroxide 130- and 2900-fold more slowy, respectively (as in Angew. Chemie - Int. Ed. 2012 , 51 ( 22 ), 5376 - 5380 , DOI: 10.1002/anie.201200901 ).

3.
Chem Sci ; 15(32): 12710-12720, 2024 Aug 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39148773

RESUMEN

Converting triplet dioxygen into a powerful oxidant is fundamentally important to life. The study reported herein quantitatively examines the formation of a well-characterized, reactive, O2-derived thiolate ligated FeIII-superoxo using low-temperature stopped-flow kinetics. Comparison of the kinetic barriers to the formation of this species via two routes, involving either the addition of (a) O2 to [FeII(S2 Me2N3(Pr,Pr))] (1) or (b) superoxide to [FeIII(S2 Me2N3(Pr,Pr))]+ (3) is shown to provide insight into the mechanism of O2 activation. Route (b) was shown to be significantly slower, and the kinetic barrier 14.9 kJ mol-1 higher than route (a), implying that dioxygen activation involves inner-sphere, as opposed to outer sphere, electron transfer from Fe(ii). H-bond donors and ligand constraints are shown to dramatically influence O2 binding kinetics and reversibility. Dioxygen binds irreversibly to [FeII(S2 Me2N3(Pr,Pr))] (1) in tetrahydrofuran, but reversibly in methanol. Hydrogen bonding decreases the ability of the thiolate sulfur to stabilize the transition state and the FeIII-superoxo, as shown by the 10 kJ mol-1 increase in the kinetic barrier to O2 binding in methanol vs. tetrahydrofuran. Dioxygen release from [FeIII(S2 Me2N3(Pr,Pr))O2] (2) is shown to be 24 kJ mol-1 higher relative to previously reported [FeIII(SMe2N4(tren))(O2)]+ (5), the latter of which contains a more flexible ligand. These kinetic results afford an experimentally determined reaction coordinate that illustrates the influence of H-bonding and ligand constraints on the kinetic barrier to dioxygen activation an essential step in biosynthetic pathways critical to life.

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