RESUMO
Seleniferous oxyanions are groundwater contaminants from both anthropogenic and natural sources, while pure amorphous selenium nanoparticles have a variety of industrial applications. Biology can achieve the multicomponent 6 e-/8 H+ reduction of selenate to amorphous selenium using multiple metalloenzymes, like selenate and selenite reductase. Inspired by biology, we developed a new homogeneous system that can generate pure elemental selenium with no caustic waste. The stoichiometric reductions of selenate, selenite, and selenium dioxide with an iron(II) complex produced an iron(III)-oxo and red elemental selenium, the latter of which has been characterized by a variety of spectroscopic techniques. The catalytic reduction of SeO42- and SeO32- directly to amorphous Se and isolated as Se=PPh3 is reported with a turnover number of 12 and 7, respectively.
RESUMO
The reduction of nitrite (NO2-) to generate nitric oxide (NO) is a significant area of research due to their roles in the global nitrogen cycle. Here, we describe various modifications of the tris(5-cyclohexyliminopyrrol-2-ylmethyl)amine H3[N(piR)3] ligand where the steric bulk and acidity of the secondary coordination sphere were explored in the non-heme iron system for nitrite reduction. The cyclohexyl and 2,4,6-trimethylphenyl variants of the ligand were used to probe the mechanism of nitrite reduction. While previously stoichiometric addition of nitrite to the iron(II)-species generated an iron(III)-oxo complex, changing the secondary coordination sphere to mesityl resulted in an iron(III)-hydroxo complex. Subsequent addition of an electron and two protons led to the release of water and regeneration of the starting iron(II) catalyst. This sequence mirrored the proposed mechanism of nitrite reduction in biological systems, where the distal histidine residue shuttles protons to the active site. Computational studies aimed at interrogating the dissimilar behavior of the cyclohexyl and mesityl ligand systems resulting in Fe(III)-oxo and Fe(III)-hydroxo complexes, respectively, shed light on the key role of H-bonds involving the secondary coordination sphere in the relative stability of these species.