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Geometric and electronic structure of a crystallographically characterized thiolate-ligated binuclear peroxo-bridged cobalt(III) complex.

Maksym A DedushkoDirk SchweitzerMaike N BlakelyRodney D SwartzWerner KaminskyJulie A Kovacs
Published in: Journal of biological inorganic chemistry : JBIC : a publication of the Society of Biological Inorganic Chemistry (2019)
In order to shed light on metal-dependent mechanisms for O-O bond cleavage, and its microscopic reverse, we compare herein the electronic and geometric structures of O2-derived binuclear Co(III)- and Mn(III)-peroxo compounds. Binuclear metal peroxo complexes are proposed to form as intermediates during Mn-promoted photosynthetic H2O oxidation, and a Co-containing artificial leaf inspired by nature's photosynthetic H2O oxidation catalyst. Crystallographic characterization of an extremely activated peroxo is made possible by working with substitution-inert, low-spin Co(III). Density functional theory (DFT) calculations show that the frontier orbitals of the Co(III)-peroxo compound differ noticeably from the analogous Mn(III)-peroxo compound. The highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) associated with the Co(III)-peroxo is more localized on the peroxo in an antibonding π*(O-O) orbital, whereas the HOMO of the structurally analogous Mn(III)-peroxo is delocalized over both the metal d-orbitals and peroxo π*(O-O) orbital. With low-spin d6 Co(III), filled t2g orbitals prevent π-back-donation from the doubly occupied antibonding π*(O-O) orbital onto the metal ion. This is not the case with high-spin d4 Mn(III), since these orbitals are half-filled. This weakens the peroxo O-O bond of the former relative to the latter.
Keyphrases
  • density functional theory
  • molecular dynamics
  • room temperature
  • transition metal
  • metal organic framework
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • single molecule
  • nitric oxide
  • ionic liquid