Hydrolysis of Nerve Agent Simulants Accelerated by Stimuli-Responsive Dinuclear Catalysts.
Qingqing SunWenqian DongBaocheng BaoYanchao LyuJie HanRong GuoPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2024)
The ability to control the catalytic activity of enzymes in chemical transformations is essential for the design and development of artificial catalysts. Herein, we report the synthesis and characterization of functional ligands featuring two 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane units linked by an azobenzene group and their corresponding dinuclear Zn(II) complexes. We show that the configuration switching ( E/Z ) of the azobenzene spacer in the ligands and their dinuclear Zn(II) complexes is reversibly controlled by irradiation with UV and visible light. The Zn(II)-metal complexes are light-responsive catalysts for the hydrolytic cleavage of nerve agent simulants, i.e., p -nitrophenyl diphenyl phosphate and methyl paraoxon. The catalytic activity of the Z -isomers of the dinuclear Zn(II) complexes outperformed that of the E -counterparts. Moreover, combining the less active E -isomers with gold nanoparticles induced an enhancement in the hydrolysis rate of p -nitrophenyl diphenyl phosphate. Kinetic analysis has shown that the catalytic site appears to involve a single metal ion. We explain our results by considering the different desolvation effects occurring in the catalyst's configurations in the solution and the catalytic systems involving gold nanoparticles.