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Directing a Non-Heme Iron(III)-Hydroperoxide Species on a Trifurcated Reactivity Pathway.

Christina WegebergFrants R LauritsenCathrine FrandsenSteen MørupWesley R BrowneChristine Joy McKenzie
Published in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2017)
The reactivity of [FeIII (tpena)]2+ (tpena=N,N,N'-tris(2-pyridylmethyl)ethylenediamine-N'-acetate) as a catalyst for oxidation reactions depends on its ratio to the terminal oxidant H2 O2 and presence or absence of sacrificial substrates. The outcome can be switched between: 1) catalysed H2 O2 disproportionation, 2) selective catalytic oxidation of methanol or benzyl alcohol to the corresponding aldehyde, or 3) oxidative decomposition of the tpena ligand. A common mechanism is proposed involving homolytic O-O cleavage in the detected transient purple low-spin (S=1/2 ) [(tpenaH)FeIII O-OH]2+ . The resultant iron(IV) oxo and hydroxyl radical both participate in controllable hydrogen-atom transfer (HAT) reactions. Consistent with the presence of a weaker σ-donor carboxylate ligand, the most pronounced difference in the spectroscopic properties of [Fe(OOH)(tpenaH)]2+ and its conjugate base, [Fe(OO)(tpenaH)]+ , compared to non-heme iron(III) peroxide analogues supported by neutral multidentate N-only ligands, are slightly blue-shifted maxima of the visible absorption band assigned to ligand-to-metal charge-transfer (LMCT) transitions and, corroborating this, lower FeIII /FeII redox potentials for the pro-catalysts.
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