The selective functionalization of strong C-H bonds and the oxidation of water by cheap and nontoxic metals are some of the key targets of chemical research today. It has been proposed that high-valent iron-, manganese-, and copper-oxo cores are involved as reactive intermediates in important oxidation reactions performed by biological systems, thus making them attractive targets for biomimetic synthetic studies. The generation and characterization of metal-oxo model complexes of iron, manganese, and copper together with detailed reactivity studies can help in understanding how the steric and electronic properties of the metal centers modulate the reactivity of the metalloenzymes. This Review provides a focused overview of the advances in the chemistry of biomimetic high-valent metal-oxo complexes from the last 5-10 years that can be related to our understanding of biological systems.
The synthesis and characterization of a hexanuclear cobalt complex 1 involving a nonheme ligand system, L1, supported on a SnO stannoxane core are reported. Complex 1 acts as a unique catalyst for dioxygen reduction, whose selectivity can be changed from a preferential 4e/4H dioxygen-reduction (to water) to a 2e/2H process (to hydrogen peroxide) only by increasing the temperature from -50 to 25 °C. A variety of spectroscopic methods (Sn-NMR, magnetic circular dichroism (MCD), electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), SQUID, UV-vis absorption, and X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS)) coupled with advanced theoretical calculations has been applied for the unambiguous assignment of the geometric and electronic structure of 1. The mechanism of the O-reduction reaction has been clarified on the basis of kinetic studies on the overall catalytic reaction as well as each step in the catalytic cycle and by low-temperature detection of intermediates. The reason why the same catalyst can act in either the two- or four-electron reduction of O can be explained by the constraint provided by the stannoxane core that makes the O-binding to 1 an entropically unfavorable process. This makes the end-on μ-1,2-peroxodicobalt(III) intermediate 2 unstable against a preferential proton-transfer step at 25 °C leading to the generation of HO. In contrast, at -50 °C, the higher thermodynamic stability of 2 leads to the cleavage of the O-O bond in 2 in the presence of electron and proton donors by a proton-coupled electron-transfer (PCET) mechanism to complete the O-to-2HO catalytic conversion in an overall 4e/4H step. The present study provides deep mechanistic insights into the dioxygen reduction process that should serve as useful and broadly applicable principles for future design of more efficient catalysts in fuel cells.
The behavior of the Lewis-acid adducts of two copper-nitrene [Cu(NR)]+ complexes in nitrene-transfer and H atom abstraction reactions have been demonstrated to depend on the nature of the nitrene substituents. Two-state reactivity, in which a singlet ground state and a nearby triplet excited-state both contribute, provides a useful model for interpreting reactivity trends of the two compounds.
Abstract. The yield of the Lewis acid adducts of a copper-tosylnitrene intermediate and their decay are dependent on the Lewis acidity of the redox innocent metal ions. Surprisingly, however, their spectroscopic properties and reactivity in nitrene transfer reaction with PPh 3 are inde-
μ‐1,2‐peroxo‐bridged diiron(III) intermediates P are proposed as reactive intermediates in various biological oxidation reactions. In sMMO, P acts as an electrophile, and performs hydrogen atom and oxygen atom transfers to electron‐rich substrates. In cyanobacterial ADO, however, P is postulated to react by nucleophilic attack on electrophilic carbon atoms. In biomimetic studies, the ability of μ‐1,2‐peroxo‐bridged dimetal complexes of Fe, Co, Ni and Cu to act as nucleophiles that effect deformylation of aldehydes is documented. By performing reactivity and theoretical studies on an end‐on μ‐1,2‐peroxodicobalt(III) complex 1 involving a non‐heme ligand system, L1, supported on a Sn6O6 stannoxane core, we now show that a peroxo‐bridged dimetal complex can also be a reactive electrophile. The observed electrophilic chemistry, which is induced by the constraints provided by the Sn6O6 core, represents a new domain for metal−peroxide reactivity.
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