scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Transition from hydrogen atom to hydride abstraction by Mn4O4(O2PPh2)6 versus [Mn4O4(O2PPh2)6]+: O-H bond dissociation energies and the formation of Mn4O3(OH)(O2PPh2)6.

TLDR
Comparisons reveal the O-H bond in 1H to be among the strongest of any Mn-hydroxo complex measured thus far, andustrates the transition to two-electron one-proton pcet chemistry in the [Mn(4)O(4)](7+) core that is understood on the basis of free energy consideration.
Abstract
Synthesis, characterization, and reactions of the novel manganese-oxo cubane complex [Mn(4)O(4)(O(2)PPh(2))(6)](ClO(4)), 1+ (ClO(4)(-)), are described. Cation 1+ is composed of the [Mn(4)O(4)](7+) core surrounded by six bidentate phosphinate ligands. The proton-coupled electron transfer (pcet) reactions of phenothiazine (pzH), the cation radical (pzH(.+)(ClO(4)(-)), and the neutral pz* radical with 1+ are reported and compared to Mn(4)O(4)(O(2)PPh(2))(6) (1). Compound 1+ (ClO(4)(-)) reacts with excess pzH via four sequential reduction steps that transfer a total of five electrons and four protons to 1+. This reaction forms the doubly dehydrated manganese cluster Mn(4)O(2)(O(2)PPh(2))(6) (2) and two water molecules derived from the corner oxygen atoms. The first pcet step forms the novel complex Mn(4)O(3)(OH)(O(2)PPh(2))(6) (1H) and 1 equiv of the pz+ cation by net hydride transfer from pzH. Spectroscopic characterization of isolated 1H is reported. Reduction of 1 by pzH or a series of para-substituted phenols also produces 1H via net H atom transfer. A lower limit to the homolytic bond dissociation energy (BDE) (1H --> 1 + H) was estimated to be >94 kcal/mol using solution phase BDEs for pzH and para-substituted phenols. The heterolytic BDE was estimated for the hydride transfer reaction 1H --> 1+ + H(-) (BDE approximately 127 kcal/mol). These comparisons reveal the O-H bond in 1H to be among the strongest of any Mn-hydroxo complex measured thus far. In three successive H atom transfer steps, 1H abstracts three hydrogen atoms from three pzH molecules to form complex 2. Complex 2 is shown to be identical to the "pinned butterfly" cluster produced by the reaction of 1 with pzH (Ruettinger, W. F.; Dismukes, G. C. Inorg. Chem. 2000, 39, 1021-1027). The Mn oxidation states in 2 are formally Mn(4)(2II,2III), and no further reduction occurs in excess pzH. By contrast, outer-sphere electron-only reductants such as cobaltacene reduce both 1+ and 1 to the all Mn(II) oxidation level and cause cluster fragmentation. The reaction of pzH(.+) with 1+ produces 1H and the pz+ cation by net hydrogen atom transfer, and terminates at 1 equiv of pzH(.+) with no further reaction at excess. By contrast, pz* does not react with 1+ at all, indicating that reduction of 1+ by electron transfer to form pz+ does not occur without a proton (pcet to 1+ is thermodynamically required). Experimental free energy changes are shown to account for these pcet reactions and the absence of electron transfer for any of the phenothiazine series. Hydrogen atom abstraction from substrates by 1 versus hydride abstraction by 1(+ )()illustrates the transition to two-electron one-proton pcet chemistry in the [Mn(4)O(4)](7+) core that is understood on the basis of free energy consideration. This transition provides a concrete example of the predicted lowest-energy pathway for the oxidation of two water molecules to H(2)O(2) as an intermediate within the photosynthetic water-oxidizing enzyme (vs sequential one-electron/proton steps). The implications for the mechanism of photosynthetic water splitting are discussed.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer

TL;DR: Proton-coupled electron transfer is an important mechanism for charge transfer in a wide variety of systems including biology- and materials-oriented venues and several are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Water-splitting chemistry of photosystem II.

TL;DR: Life on earth is almost entirely solar-powered, with carbohydrate acting as a source of high-energy electrons and dioxygen providing a lower-energy destination for these electrons.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new paradigm for the action of reactive oxygen species in the photoinhibition of photosystem II

TL;DR: A new paradigm for the action of ROS in photoinhibition is presented, which shows that ROS suppress the synthesis de novo of proteins and, in particular, of the D1 protein, that are required for the repair of PSII.
Journal ArticleDOI

Manganese clusters with relevance to photosystem II.

TL;DR: A hybrid density functional theory has been utilized to put forward a triangular Mn moiety closely coupled by μ-oxo groups as a potential model for the WO site and another mechanism incorporating a “C-shaped” cluster has also been suggested recently.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development of bioinspired Mn4O4-Cubane water oxidation catalysts: Lessons from photosynthesis

TL;DR: The chemical principles that may govern the PSII-WOC are examined by comparing the water oxidation capabilities of structurally related synthetic manganese-oxo complexes, particularly those with a cubical Mn( 4)O(4) core ("cubanes").
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Crystal structure of photosystem II from Synechococcus elongatus at 3.8 A resolution.

TL;DR: The X-ray structure of photosystem II is described on the basis of crystals fully active in water oxidation, shows how protein subunits and cofactors are spatially organized and the larger subunits are assigned and the locations and orientations of the cofacters are defined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Proton-coupled electron transfer.

TL;DR: Methods for the evaluation of these rate constants are discussed that are based on dielectric continuum theory and the rate-constant expressions corresponding to the ETPT and ET/PT channels for several model reaction complexes are evaluated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oxygen Production in Nature: A Light-Driven Metalloradical Enzyme Process

TL;DR: The physical structure and energetics of PSII are reviewed and a metalloradical enzyme mechanism for the water-oxidation process it catalyzes is discussed, which is based on the specifics of the chemistry in which O2 participates.
Related Papers (5)