Kinetic and mechanistic investigations of dioxygen reduction by a molecular Cu(II) catalyst bearing a pentadentate amidate ligand.

Autor: Chowdhury SN; Department of Chemistry, National Institute of Technology Sikkim, Ravangla, South Sikkim 737139, India. achintesh@nitsikkim.ac.in., Biswas S; Department of Chemistry, National Institute of Technology Sikkim, Ravangla, South Sikkim 737139, India. achintesh@nitsikkim.ac.in., Das S; Department of Chemistry, National Institute of Technology Sikkim, Ravangla, South Sikkim 737139, India. achintesh@nitsikkim.ac.in., Biswas AN; Department of Chemistry, National Institute of Technology Sikkim, Ravangla, South Sikkim 737139, India. achintesh@nitsikkim.ac.in.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Dalton transactions (Cambridge, England : 2003) [Dalton Trans] 2023 Aug 22; Vol. 52 (33), pp. 11581-11590. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Aug 22.
DOI: 10.1039/d3dt02194g
Abstrakt: A pentadentate Cu(II) complex, [Cu II (dpaq)](ClO 4 ) (1), featuring a redox active ligand, H-dpaq (H-dpaq = 2-[bis(pyridine-2-ylmethyl)]amino- N -quinolin-8-yl-acetamidate), catalyses four-electron reduction of dioxygen by decamethylferrocene (Fc*) in the presence of trifluoroacetic acid (CF 3 COOH) in acetone at 298 K. No catalytic oxygen reduction was observed in the presence of stronger Brønsted acids than CF 3 COOH, such as perchloric acid (HClO 4 ) or trifluoromethanesulphonic acid (HOTf). In contrast, facile catalytic reduction of O 2 occurs by Fc* with 1 and HClO 4 or HOTf in dimethylformamide (DMF). The use of CF 3 COOH as the proton source in DMF results in the suppression of O 2 reduction under otherwise identical reaction conditions. While the O 2 reduction reactions in DMF are linearly dependent on the p K a of Brønsted acids, the acid dependence on catalytic O 2 -reduction reactivity by 1 in acetone showed complete reversal. Cyclic voltammetry studies using p -chloranil as the probe substrates in the presence of acids in the solvents reveal that the strengths of the protonic acids increase significantly in acetone compared to that in DMF. The amidate-N in [Cu II (dpaq)](ClO 4 ) (1) undergoes protonation in the presence of HClO 4 or HOTf in DMF to form [Cu II (H-dpaq)] 2+ (1-H+), but not in the presence of CF 3 COOH. Enhanced acid strength of CF 3 COOH in acetone, however, effectively protonates 1 and triggers O 2 reduction. Protonation of 1 with HClO 4 or HOTf in acetone results in the change of its coordination environment, and this protonated species does not trigger O 2 reduction. Detailed kinetic studies indicate that 1-H+ undergoes reduction by two-electrons and the reduced species binds O 2 to form a Cu(II)-superoxo intermediate. This is followed by a rate-determining proton-coupled electron-transfer (PCET) reduction to generate the Cu(II)-hydroperoxo intermediate. While catalytic O 2 reduction in acetone occurs predominantly via a 4e - /4H + pathway, product selectivity (H 2 O vs. H 2 O 2 ) in DMF depends upon the concentration of the reductant (Fc*). While dioxygen reduction to H 2 O 2 is favoured at low [Fc*], mechanistic studies suggest that O 2 reduction with high [Fc*] proceeds via a [2e - + 2e - ] mechanism, where the released H 2 O 2 during catalysis is further reduced to water.
Databáze: MEDLINE