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1.
Inorg Chem ; 59(13): 8678-8689, 2020 Jul 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32073833

RESUMO

A series of copper/nitrosoarene complexes was created that mimics several steps in biomimetic O2 activation by copper(I). The reaction of the copper(I) complex of N,N,N',N'-tetramethypropylenediamine with a series of para-substituted nitrosobenzene derivatives leads to adducts in which the nitrosoarene (ArNO) is reduced by zero, one, or two electrons, akin to the isovalent species dioxygen, superoxide, and peroxide, respectively. The geometric and electronic structures of these adducts were characterized by means of X-ray diffraction, vibrational analysis, ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy, NMR, electrochemistry, and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The bonding mode of the NO moiety depends on the oxidation state of the ArNO moiety: κN for ArNO, mononuclear η2-NO and dinuclear µ-η2:η1 for ArNO•-, and dinuclear µ-η2:η2 for ArNO2-. 15N isotopic labeling confirms the reduction state by measuring the NO stretching frequency (1392 cm-1 for κN-ArNO, 1226 cm-1 for η2-ArNO•-, 1133 cm-1 for dinuclear µ-η2:η1-ArNO•-, and 875 cm-1 for dinuclear µ-η2:η2 for ArNO2-). The 15N NMR signal disappears for the ArNO•- species, establishing a unique diagnostic for the radical state. Electrochemical studies indicate reduction waves that are consistent with one-electron reduction of the adducts and are compared with studies performed on Cu-O2 analogues. DFT calculations were undertaken to confirm our experimental findings, notably to establish the nature of the charge-transfer transitions responsible for the intense green color of the complexes. In fine, this family of complexes is unique in that it walks through three redox states of the ArNO moiety while keeping the metal and its supporting ligand the same. This work provides snapshots of the reactivity of the toxic nitrosoarene molecules with the biologically relevant Cu(I) ion.

2.
Chemistry ; 24(20): 5213-5224, 2018 Apr 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29406617

RESUMO

Water oxidation by copper-based complexes to form dioxygen has attracted attention in recent years, with the aim of developing efficient and cheap catalysts for chemical energy storage. In addition, high-valent metal-oxo species produced by the oxidation of metal complexes in the presence of water can be used to achieve substrate oxygenation with the use of H2 O as an oxygen source. To date, this strategy has not been reported for copper complexes. Herein, a copper(II) complex, [(RPY2)Cu(OTf)2 ] (RPY2=N-substituted bis[2-pyridyl(ethylamine)] ligands; R=indane; OTf=triflate), is used. This complex, which contains an oxidizable substrate moiety (indane), is used as a tool to monitor an intramolecular oxygen atom transfer reaction. Electrochemical properties were investigated and, upon electrolysis at 1.30 V versus a normal hydrogen electrode (NHE), both dioxygen production and oxygenation of the indane moiety were observed. The ligand was oxidized in a highly diastereoselective manner, which indicated that the observed reactivity was mediated by metal-centered reactive species. The pH dependence of the reactivity was monitored and correlated with speciation deduced from different techniques, ranging from potentiometric titrations to spectroscopic studies and DFT calculations. Water oxidation for dioxygen production occurs at neutral pH and is probably mediated by the oxidation of a mononuclear copper(II) precursor. It is achieved with a rather low overpotential (280 mV at pH 7), although with limited efficiency. On the other hand, oxygenation is maximum at pH 8-8.5 and is probably mediated by the electrochemical oxidation of an antiferromagnetically coupled dinuclear bis(µ-hydroxo) copper(II) precursor. This constitutes the first example of copper-centered oxidative water activation for a selective oxygenation reaction.

3.
Inorg Chem ; 57(19): 12364-12375, 2018 Oct 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30226767

RESUMO

A (µ-hydroxido, µ-phenoxido)CuIICuII complex 1 has been synthesized using an unsymmetrical ligand bearing an N, N-bis(2-pyridyl)methylamine (BPA) moiety coordinating one copper and a dianionic bis-amide moiety coordinating the other copper(II) ion. Electrochemical mono-oxidation of the complex in DMF occurs reversibly at 213 K at E1/2 = 0.12 V vs Fc+/Fc through a metal-centered process. The resulting species (complex 1+) is only stable at low temperature and has been spectroscopically characterized by UV-vis-NIR cryo-spectroelectrochemical and EPR methods. DFT and TD-DFT calculations, consistent with experimental data, support the formation of a CuIICuIII phenoxido-hydroxido complex. Low-temperature chemical oxidation of 1 by NOSbF6 yields a tetranuclear complex 2(SbF6)(NO2) which displays two binuclear CuIICuII subunits. The X-ray crystal structure of 2(SbF6)(NO2) evidences that the nitrogen of the terminal amide group is protonated and the coordination of the amide occurs via the O atom. The bis-amide moiety appears to be a non-innocent proton acceptor along the redox process. Alternatively, protonation of complex 1 leads to the complex 2(ClO4)2, as evidenced by X-ray crystallography, cyclic voltammetry, and 1H NMR.

4.
Inorg Chem ; 56(14): 7707-7719, 2017 Jul 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28665137

RESUMO

The redox properties and electronic structures of a series of phenoxo- and hydroxo-bridged dicopper(II) complexes have been explored. Complexes (1a-c)2+ are based on symmetrical ligands with bis(2-methylpyridyl)aminomethyl as complexing arms bearing different substituting R groups (CH3, OCH3, or CF3) in the para position of the phenol moiety. Complex 2a2+ is based on a symmetrical ligand with bis(2-ethylpyridyl)aminomethyl arms and R = CH3, while complex 3a2+ involves an unsymmetrical ligand with two different complexing arms (namely bis(2-ethylpyridyl)aminomethyl and bis(2-methylpyridyl)aminomethyl). Investigations have been done by electrochemical and spectroelectrochemical means and correlated to theoretical calculations as this series of complexes offers a unique opportunity of an in-depth comparative analysis. The voltammetric studies have shown that the redox behavior of the dicopper complexes is not influenced by the nature of the solvent. However, the increase of the spacer chain length and the unsymmetrical design induce significant modifications of the voltammetric responses for both oxidation and reduction processes. DFT calculations of the redox potentials using a computational reference redox couple calculated at the same level of theory to reduce systematic errors confirm these results. Ligand contributions to the electronic structure of the different species have been analyzed in detail. The good agreement between experimental and theoretical results has validated the developed calculation method, which would be used in the following to design new dinuclear copper complexes. These studies demonstrate that subtle modification of the ligand topology can significantly affect the redox and spectroscopic properties. In particular, the unsymmetrical design allows the formation of a transient mixed-valent Cu(II)-Cu(III) phenoxo complex detected upon spectroelectrochemical experiments at room temperature, which evolves toward a dicopper (II,II) phenoxyl complex. The latter displays an intense π → π* transition band at 393 nm in the UV-vis spectrum compared to the less intense ligand to metal charge transfer band at 518 nm observed for the mixed-valent Cu(II)-Cu(III) phenoxo complex.

5.
Inorg Chem ; 55(17): 8263-6, 2016 Sep 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27518211

RESUMO

Bis(µ-hydroxo)dicopper(II,II) bearing a naphthyridine-based ligand has been synthesized and characterized in the solid state and solution. Cyclic voltammetry at room temperature displays a reversible redox system that corresponds to the monoelectronic oxidation of the complex. Spectroscopic and time-resolved spectroelectrochemical data coupled to theoretical results support the formation of a charge-localized mixed-valent Cu(II,III)2 species.

6.
Chempluschem ; 82(4): 615-624, 2017 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31961577

RESUMO

The synthesis of a dinuclear copper(II) complex, supported by a 1,3-diamino-2-propanol-based tetraamide ligand, is reported. Structural properties in the solid state and in solution, by means of XRD analysis and NMR spectroscopy, respectively, provide evidence of a highly flexible complex that can display several conformations, leading to the image of the wings of a butterfly. The complex was fully characterized and the redox properties were investigated. Room-temperature spectro-electrochemistry was used to monitor the formation of a metastable mono-oxidized product that displayed an absorption band centered at λ=463 nm. EPR investigation of the low-temperature, chemically generated, mono-oxidized product reveals the presence of an intermediate described as a mixed-valent CuII CuIII species, which is a model of the possible highly oxidizing intermediate in particulate methane monooxygenase.

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