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Unraveling the Geometry-Driven C═C Epoxidation and C-H Hydroxylation Reactivity of Tetra-Coordinated Nonheme Iron(IV)-Oxo Complexes.

Akhil BhardwajBhaskar Mondal
Published in: Inorganic chemistry (2024)
The electronic structure and reactivity of tetra-coordinated nonheme iron(IV)-oxo complexes have remained unexplored for years. The recent synthesis of a closed-shell iron(IV)-oxo complex [(quinisox)Fe IV (O)] + ( 1 ) has set up a platform to understand how such complexes compare with the celebrated open-shell iron-oxo chemistry. Herein, using density functional theory and ab initio calculations, we present an in-depth electronic structure investigation of the C═C epoxidation [oxygen atom transfer (OAT)] and C-H hydroxylation [hydrogen atom transfer (HAT)] reactivity of 1 . Using a solvent-coordinated geometry of 1 ( 1' ) and other potential tetra-coordinated iron(IV)-oxo complexes bearing rigid ligands ( 2 and 3 ), we established the geometric origin of spin-state energetics and reactivity of 1 . Complex 1 featuring a strong Fe-O bond exhibits OAT and HAT reactivity in its quintet state. The lowest quintet OAT pathway has a lower barrier by ∼4 kcal/mol than the quintet HAT pathway, corroborating the experimentally observed gas-phase OAT reactivity preference. A conventional HAT reactivity preference for 2 and a comparable OAT and HAT reactivity for 3 are observed. This further supports the geometry-driven reactivity preference for 1 . Noncovalent interaction analyses reveal a pronounced π-π interaction between the substrate and ligand in the OAT transition state, rationalizing the origin of the observed reactivity preference for 1 .
Keyphrases
  • density functional theory
  • molecular dynamics
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