To fully characterize the CoIII–‘nitrene radical’ species that are proposed as intermediates in nitrene transfer reactions mediated by cobalt(II) porphyrins, different combinations of cobalt(II) complexes of porphyrins and nitrene transfer reagents were combined, and the generated species were studied using EPR, UV–vis, IR, VCD, UHR-ESIMS, and XANES/XAFS measurements. Reactions of cobalt-(II) porphyrins 1P1 (P1 = meso-tetraphenylporphyrin (TPP)) and 1P2 (P2 = 3,5-DitBu-ChenPhyrin) with organic azides 2Ns (NsN3), 2Ts (TsN3), and 2Troc (TrocN3) led to the formation of mono-nitrene species 3P1Ns, 3P2Ts, and 3P2Troc, respectively, which are best described as [CoIII(por)(NR″•−)] nitrene radicals (imidyl radicals) resulting from single electron transfer from the cobalt(II) porphyrin to the ‘nitrene’ moiety (Ns: R″ = –SO2-p-C6H5NO2; Ts: R″ = –SO2C6H6; Troc: R″ = –C(O)OCH2CCl3). Remarkably, the reaction of 1P1 with N-nosyl iminoiodane (PhI=NNs) 4Ns led to the formation of a bis-nitrene species 5P1Ns. This species is best described as a triple-radical complex [(por•−)CoIII(NR″•−)2] containing three ligand-centered unpaired electrons: two nitrene radicals (NR″•−) and one oxidized porphyrin radical (por•−). Thus, the formation of the second nitrene radical involves another intramolecular one-electron transfer to the “nitrene” moiety, but now from the porphyrin ring instead of the metal center. Interestingly, this bis-nitrene species is observed only on reacting 4Ns with 1P1. Reaction of the more bulky 1P2 with 4Ns results again in formation of mainly mono-nitrene species 3P2Ns according to EPR and ESI-MS spectroscopic studies. The mono- and bis-nitrene species were initially expected to be five- and six-coordinate species, respectively, but XANES data revealed that both mono- and bis-nitrene species are six-coordinate Oh species. The nature of the sixth ligand bound to cobalt(III) in the mono-nitrene case remains elusive, but some plausible candidates are NH3, NH2−, NsNH−, and OH−; NsNH− being the most plausible. Conversion of mono-nitrene species 3P1Ns into bis-nitrene species 5P1Ns upon reaction with 4Ns was demonstrated. Solutions containing 3P1Ns and 5P1Ns proved to be still active in catalytic aziridination of styrene, consistent with their proposed key involvement in nitrene transfer reactions mediated by cobalt(II) porphyrins.
A new catalyst (see structure) hydroxylates phenols with O2 via a stable side‐on peroxide complex, which is similar to the active site of tyrosinase in terms of the ligand environment and its spectroscopic properties. The catalytic oxidation of phenols to quinones proceeds at room temperature in the presence of NEt3 and even non‐native substrates can be oxidized catalytically. The reaction mechanism is analogous to that of the enzyme‐catalyzed reaction.
Redox-inactive metal ions that function as Lewis acids play pivotal roles in modulating reactivities of oxygen-containing metal complexes in a variety of biological and biomimetic reactions, including dioxygen activation/formation and functionalization of organic substrates. Mononuclear nonheme iron(III)-peroxo species are invoked as active oxygen intermediates in the catalytic cycles of dioxygen activation by nonheme iron enzymes and their biomimetic compounds. Here, we report mononuclear nonheme iron(III)-peroxo complexes binding redox-inactive metal ions, [(TMC)FeIII(O2)]+-M3+ (M3+ = Sc3+ and Y3+; TMC = 1,4,8,11-tetramethyl-1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradecane), which are characterized spectroscopically as a ‘side-on’ iron(III)-peroxo complex binding a redox-inactive metal ion, (TMC)FeIII-(μ,η2:η2-O2)-M3+ (2-M). While an iron(III)-peroxo complex, [(TMC)FeIII(O2)]+, does not react with electron donors (e.g., ferrocene), one-electron reduction of the iron(III)-peroxo complexes binding redox-inactive metal ions occurs readily upon addition of electron donors, resulting in the generation of an iron(IV)-oxo complex, [(TMC)FeIV(O)]2+ (4), via heterolytic O-O bond cleavage of the peroxide ligand. The rates of the conversion of 2-M to 4 are found to depend on the Lewis acidity of the redox-inactive metal ions and the oxidation potential of the electron donors. We have also determined the fundamental electron-transfer properties of 2-M, such as the reduction potential and the reorganization energy in electron-transfer reaction. Based on the results presented herein, we have proposed a mechanism for the reactions of 2-M and electron donors; the reduction of 2-M to the reduced species, (TMC)FeII-(O2)-M3+ (2’-M), is the rate-determining step, followed by heterolytic O-O bond cleavage of the reduced species to form 4. The present results provide a biomimetic example demonstrating that redox-inactive metal ions bound to an iron(III)-peroxo intermediate play a significant role in activating the peroxide O-O bond to form a high-valent iron(IV)-oxo species.
A cobalt-porphyrin catalyst encapsulated in a cubic M8 L6 cage allows cyclopropanation reactions in aqueous media. The caged-catalyst shows enhanced activities in acetone/water as compared to pure acetone. Interestingly, the M8 L6 encapsulated catalyst reveals size-selectivity. Smaller substrates more easily penetrate through the pores of the "molecular ship-in-a-bottle catalysts" and are hence converted faster than bigger substrates. In addition, N-tosylhydrazone sodium salts are easy to handle reagents for cyclopropanation reactions under these conditions.
The synthesis of a new, cubic M8L6 cage is described. This new assembly was characterised by using NMR spectroscopy, DOSY, TGA, MS, and molecular modelling techniques. Interestingly, the enlarged cavity size of this new supramolecular assembly allows the selective encapsulation of tetra(4-pyridyl)metalloporphyrins (M(II)(TPyP), M = Zn, Co). The obtained encapsulated cobalt-porphyrin embedded in the cubic zinc-porphyrin assembly is the first example of a catalytically active encapsulated transition-metal complex in a cubic M8L6 cage. The substrate accessibility of this system was demonstrated through radical-trapping experiments, and its catalytic activity was demonstrated in two different radical-type transformations. The reactivity of the encapsulated Co(II)(TPyP) complex is significantly increased compared to free Co(II)(TPyP) and other cobalt-porphyrin complexes. The reactions catalysed by this system are the first examples of cobalt-porphyrin-catalysed radical-type transformations involving diazo compounds which occur inside a supramolecular cage.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.