Formation and High Reactivity of the anti‐Dioxo Form of High‐Spin μ‐Oxodioxodiiron(IV) as the Active Species That Cleaves Strong C−H Bonds |
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Authors: | Prof. Dr. Masahito Kodera Shin Ishiga Tomokazu Tsuji Katsutoshi Sakurai Prof. Dr. Yutaka Hitomi Dr. Yoshihito Shiota Dr. P. K. Sajith Prof. Dr. Kazunari Yoshizawa Dr. Kaoru Mieda Prof. Dr. Takashi Ogura |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Molecular Chemistry and Biochemistry, Doshisha University, Kyotanabe Kyoto, Japan;2. Institute for Materials Chemistry and Engineering, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan;3. Department of Life Science, University of Hyogo, Ako-gun Kamigori-cho Hyogo, Japan |
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Abstract: | Recently, it was shown that μ‐oxo‐μ‐peroxodiiron(III) is converted to high‐spin μ‐oxodioxodiiron(IV) through O?O bond scission. Herein, the formation and high reactivity of the anti‐dioxo form of high‐spin μ‐oxodioxodiiron(IV) as the active oxidant are demonstrated on the basis of resonance Raman and electronic‐absorption spectral changes, detailed kinetic studies, DFT calculations, activation parameters, kinetic isotope effects (KIE), and catalytic oxidation of alkanes. Decay of μ‐oxodioxodiiron(IV) was greatly accelerated on addition of substrate. The reactivity order of substrates is toluenetrans‐β‐methylstyrene. The rate constants increased proportionally to the substrate concentration at low substrate concentration. At high substrate concentration, however, the rate constants converge to the same value regardless of the kind of substrate. This is explained by a two‐step mechanism in which anti‐μ‐oxodioxodiiron(IV) is formed by syn‐to‐anti transformation of the syn‐dioxo form and reacts with substrates as the oxidant. The anti‐dioxo form is 620 times more reactive in the C?H bond cleavage of ethylbenzene than the most reactive diiron system reported so far. The KIE for the reaction with toluene/[D8]toluene is 95 at ?30 °C, which the largest in diiron systems reported so far. The present diiron complex efficiently catalyzes the oxidation of various alkanes with H2O2. |
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Keywords: | C− H activation iron oxidation oxido ligands reaction mechanisms |
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