Acid-Triggered O-O Bond Heterolysis of a Nonheme FeIII (OOH) Species for the Stereospecific Hydroxylation of Strong C-H Bonds.
Joan Serrano-PlanaFerran Acuña-ParésValeria DantignanaWilliamson N OlooCarmen E CastilloApparao DraksharapuChristopher J WhiteoakVlad Martin-DiaconescuManuel G BasalloteJosep M LuisLawrence QueMiquel CostasAnna CompanyPublished in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2018)
A novel hydroperoxoiron(III) species [FeIII (OOH)(MeCN)(PyNMe3 )]2+ (3) has been generated by reaction of its ferrous precursor [FeII (CF3 SO3 )2 (PyNMe3 )] (1) with hydrogen peroxide at low temperatures. This species has been characterized by several spectroscopic techniques and cryospray mass spectrometry. Similar to most of the previously described low-spin hydroperoxoiron(III) compounds, 3 behaves as a sluggish oxidant and it is not kinetically competent for breaking weak C-H bonds. However, triflic acid addition to 3 causes its transformation into a much more reactive compound towards organic substrates that is capable of oxidizing unactivated C-H bonds with high stereospecificity. Stopped-flow kinetic analyses and theoretical studies provide a rationale for the observed chemistry, a triflic-acid-assisted heterolytic cleavage of the O-O bond to form a putative strongly oxidizing oxoiron(V) species. This mechanism is reminiscent to that observed in heme systems, where protonation of the hydroperoxo intermediate leads to the formation of the high-valent [(Porph. )FeIV (O)] (Compound I).