
Generation and Oxidative Reactivity of a Ni(II) Superoxo Complex via Ligand-Based Redox Non-Innocence
Author(s) -
Andrew J. McNeece,
Kate Jesse,
Jiaze Xie,
Alexander S. Filatov,
John S. Anderson
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.0c03244
Subject(s) - chemistry , redox , non innocent ligand , ligand (biochemistry) , cooperativity , reactivity (psychology) , electron transfer , metal , combinatorial chemistry , photochemistry , inorganic chemistry , organic chemistry , receptor , medicine , biochemistry , alternative medicine , pathology
Metal ligand cooperativity is a powerful strategy in transition metal chemistry. This type of mechanism for the activation of O 2 is best exemplified by heme centers in biological systems. While aerobic oxidations with Fe and Cu are well precedented, Ni-based oxidations are frequently less common due to less-accessible metal-based redox couples. Some Ni enzymes utilize special ligand environments for tuning the Ni(II)/(III) redox couple such as strongly donating thiolates in Ni superoxide dismutase. A recently characterized example of a Ni-containing protein, however, suggests an alternative strategy for mediating redox chemistry with Ni by utilizing ligand-based reducing equivalents to enable oxygen binding. While this mechanism has little synthetic precedent, we show here that Ni complexes of the redox-active ligand t Bu,Tol DHP ( t Bu,Tol DHP = 2,5-bis((2- t -butylhydrazono)( p -tolyl)methyl)-pyrrole) activate O 2 to generate a Ni(II) superoxo complex via ligand-based electron transfer. This superoxo complex is competent for stoichiometric oxidation chemistry with alcohols and hydrocarbons. This work demonstrates that coupling ligand-based redox chemistry with functionally redox-inactive Ni centers enables oxidative transformations more commonly mediated by metals such as Fe and Cu.