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Frédéric Banse

Other affiliations: University of Paris-Sud
Bio: Frédéric Banse is an academic researcher from Université Paris-Saclay. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ligand & Coordination sphere. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 52 publications receiving 1580 citations. Previous affiliations of Frédéric Banse include University of Paris-Sud.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Enzymes with an iron(III) resting state often require a tetrahydropterin or an α-keto acid cofactor to form an FeIV(O) intermediate, and such intermediates have recently been trapped and characterized for several enzymes.
Abstract: With the aid of HClO{sub 4} as proton and BPh{sub 4}{sup -} as electron source, the Fe complex of a pentadentate pyridyl-appended cyclam ligands can activate dioxygen to yield the corresponding oxoiron(IV) complex (see scheme; TMC-py=1-(2'-pyridylmethyl)-4,8,11-trimethyl-1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradecane; C gray, Fe magneta, N blue, O red). This transformation is proposed to occur via a hydroperoxoiron(III) intermediate.

139 citations

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the EPR g-tensor of the Fe(II)-dioxygen adduct and the catalytic site in many mono-iron biomolecules has been analyzed.
Abstract: Iron-peroxo Fe(III)O2 and hydroperoxo Fe(III)OOH systems are important intermediates between the initial Fe(II)-dioxygen adduct and the “activated” form of the catalytic site in many mono-iron biomolecules. To the same peroxidic level correspond, in diiron enzymes, bridged peroxo Fe(III)-O-O-Fe(III) intermediates. This review is concerned with the preparation and spectroscopic characterization of such intermediates in non-heme chemical systems, the properties of the natural systems being quoted as references. Although none have been crystallized, it seems very likely that Fe(III)OOH systems present a η 1 - coordination mode for the hydroperoxo group. These Fe(III)OOH units have given clear signatures in UV-vis, resonance Raman and mass spectrometry. By EPR it was found that in Fe(III)OOH, the Fe(III) is low-spin (S = 1/2) and we propose here a simple rationalization of the characteristics of the EPR g-tensor. The electronic properties of the Fe(III)(η1-OOH) known so far, point toward a strong Fe-O bond and a weak O-O bond, in total agreement with the reactivity scheme implying a cleavage of the O-O bond to lead formally to a Fe(V)O unit. Alkylperoxo systems are also included in this review. Fe(III)-peroxo systems Fe(III)O2 have been prepared and described. They contain high-spin Fe(III) and those identified seem to be of the η 2 type. The Fe-O bond is weaker and the O-O one is stronger than in the Fe(III)OOH systems. The implication of these Fe(III)O2 units in catalysis is unclear. “Complementary” systems, such as Fe(III)(η 1-OO) or Fe(III)(η 2-OOH) have been evoked in publications but not identified spectroscopically. These systems certainly deserve to be actively looked for.

103 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the spectral properties of nonheme Fe(III)-peroxo complexes with aminopyridyl-type ligands have been characterized by UV/Vis, EPR, mass and Resonance Raman spectroscopy.
Abstract: Nonheme Fe(III)-hydroperoxo and Fe(III)-peroxo complexes with aminopyridyl-type ligands have been prepared and characterized by UV/Vis, EPR, mass and Resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopy. The Fe(III)(OOH) species are low-spin and exhibit a deep purple color due to the ligand-to-metal charge transfer (LMCT) hand centered at ca. 550 nm. The RR spectra of the Fe(III)(OOH) complexes display two bands at ca. 620 and 800 cm-1 that are assigned to the respective Fe-O and O-O stretching modes on the basis of the characteristic H/D and 16O/18O frequency shifts. Upon deprotonation, Fe(III)(O2) species are obtained which possess a high-spin configuration of nearly axial symmetry and a LMCT transition in the near infrared (ca. 750 nm). The frequencies of the Fe-O and O-O stretching modes at ca. 465 and 820 cm-1, as well as their respective 16O/18O shifts of -16 and -45 cm-1, indicate an ?2 coordination geometry for the Fe(III)(O2) complex.

94 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that [(L(5)(2))Fe(OOH)](2+) decays in the presence of aromatic substrates, such as anisole and benzene in acetonitrile, with first-order kinetics, which supports the proposed mechanism for the formation of two caged Fe(IV)(O) and OH(·) species from the Fe(III)(OOH) complex.
Abstract: Ferric-hydroperoxo complexes have been identified as intermediates in the catalytic cycle of biological oxidants, but their role as key oxidants is still a matter of debate. Among the numerous synthetic low-spin Fe(III)(OOH) complexes characterized to date, [(L(5)(2))Fe(OOH)](2+) is the only one that has been isolated in the solid state at low temperature, which has provided a unique opportunity for inspecting its oxidizing properties under single-turnover conditions. In this report we show that [(L(5)(2))Fe(OOH)](2+) decays in the presence of aromatic substrates, such as anisole and benzene in acetonitrile, with first-order kinetics. In addition, the phenol products are formed from the aromatic substrates with similar first-order rate constants. Combining the kinetic data obtained at different temperatures and under different single-turnover experimental conditions with experiments performed under catalytic conditions by using the substrate [1,3,5-D(3)]benzene, which showed normal kinetic isotope effects (KIE>1) and a notable hydride shift (NIH shift), has allowed us to clarify the role played by Fe(III)(OOH) in aromatic oxidation. Several lines of experimental evidence in support of the previously postulated mechanism for the formation of two caged Fe(IV)(O) and OH(·) species from the Fe(III)(OOH) complex have been obtained for the first time. After homolytic O-O cleavage, a caged pair of oxidants [Fe(IV)O+HO(·)] is generated that act in unison to hydroxylate the aromatic ring: HO(·) attacks the ring to give a hydroxycyclohexadienyl radical, which is further oxidized by Fe(IV)O to give a cationic intermediate that gives rise to a NIH shift upon ketonization before the final re-aromatization step. Spin-trapping experiments in the presence of 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide and GC-MS analyses of the intermediate products further support the proposed mechanism.

90 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the core integrity of inorganic nanobuilding blocks (NBBs) is preserved and the main synthetic procedures presented in the literature are reviewed and extended to nanoparticule-based hybrid networks.
Abstract: This article describes hybrid materials and systems in which the core integrity of inorganic nanobuilding blocks (NBBs) is preserved and reviews the main synthetic procedures presented in the literature. The relation between the NBB and the resulting hybrid networks is discussed for several striking examples: silicon and tin oxo clusters, polyoxometalates, and transition metal−oxo-based clusters. This approach is extended to nanoparticule-based hybrids. The chemical strategies offered by the coupling of soft chemistry processes and this approach based on functional NBBs allows, through an intelligent and tuned coding, to develop a new vectorial chemistry that is able to direct the assembly of a large variety of structurally well-defined clusters or nanoparticles into complex architectures.

1,124 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a review of the chemical aspects of the incorporation of inorganic building blocks such as silica networks, porous materials, metals, etc. into an organic polymeric matrix is presented.

1,100 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Reactions of synthetic iron(IV)-oxo porphyrin pi-cation radicals and mononuclear non-heme Iron(IV-oxo complexes in oxygenation reactions have been discussed as chemical models of cytochrome P450 and non- heme iron enzymes to demonstrate how mechanistic developments in biomimetic research can help understanding of dioxygen activation and oxygen atom transfer reactions in nature.
Abstract: High-valent iron(IV)-oxo species have been implicated as the key reactive intermediates in the catalytic cycles of dioxygen activation by heme and non-heme iron enzymes. Our understanding of the enzymatic reactions has improved greatly via investigation of spectroscopic and chemical properties of heme and non-heme iron(IV)-oxo complexes. In this Account, reactivities of synthetic iron(IV)-oxo porphyrin pi-cation radicals and mononuclear non-heme iron(IV)-oxo complexes in oxygenation reactions have been discussed as chemical models of cytochrome P450 and non-heme iron enzymes. These results demonstrate how mechanistic developments in biomimetic research can help our understanding of dioxygen activation and oxygen atom transfer reactions in nature.

948 citations