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Redox Isomerism in the S 3 State of the Oxygen‐Evolving Complex Resolved by Coupled Cluster Theory
Author(s) -
Drosou Maria,
Pantazis Dimitrios A.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
chemistry – a european journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.687
H-Index - 242
eISSN - 1521-3765
pISSN - 0947-6539
DOI - 10.1002/chem.202101567
Subject(s) - chemistry , redox , oxidizing agent , density functional theory , catalytic cycle , cluster (spacecraft) , catalysis , chemical physics , computational chemistry , crystallography , inorganic chemistry , computer science , programming language , biochemistry , organic chemistry
The electronic and geometric structures of the water‐oxidizing complex of photosystem II in the steps of the catalytic cycle that precede dioxygen evolution remain hotly debated. Recent structural and spectroscopic investigations support contradictory redox formulations for the active‐site Mn 4 CaO x cofactor in the final metastable S 3 state. These range from the widely accepted Mn IV 4 oxo‐hydroxo model, which presumes that O−O bond formation occurs in the ultimate transient intermediate (S 4 ) of the catalytic cycle, to a Mn III 2 Mn IV 2 peroxo model representative of the contrasting “early‐onset” O−O bond formation hypothesis. Density functional theory energetics of suggested S 3 redox isomers are inconclusive because of extreme functional dependence. Here, we use the power of the domain‐based local pair natural orbital approach to coupled cluster theory, DLPNO‐CCSD(T), to present the first correlated wave function theory calculations of relative stabilities for distinct redox‐isomeric forms of the S 3 state. Our results enabled us to evaluate conflicting models for the S 3 state of the oxygen‐evolving complex (OEC) and to quantify the accuracy of lower‐level theoretical approaches. Our assessment of the relevance of distinct redox‐isomeric forms for the mechanism of biological water oxidation strongly disfavors the scenario of early‐onset O−O formation advanced by literal interpretations of certain crystallographic models. This work serves as a case study in the application of modern coupled cluster implementations to redox isomerism problems in oligonuclear transition metal systems.