JOURNAL ARTICLE

A Structural and Mössbauer Study of Complexes with Fe2(μ-O(H))2 Cores:  Stepwise Oxidation from FeII-OH)2FeII through FeII-OH)2FeIII to FeIII-O)(μ-OH)FeIII

Abstract

Dinuclear non-heme iron clusters containing oxo, hydroxo, or carboxylato bridges are found in a number of enzymes involved in O(2) metabolism such as methane monooxygenase, ribonucleotide reductase, and fatty acid desaturases. Efforts to model structural and/or functional features of the protein-bound clusters have prompted the preparation and study of complexes that contain Fe(micro-O(H))(2)Fe cores. Here we report the structures and spectroscopic properties of a family of diiron complexes with the same tetradentate N4 ligand in one ligand topology, namely [(alpha-BPMCN)(2)Fe(II)(2)(micro-OH)(2)](CF(3)SO(3))(2) (1), [(alpha-BPMCN)(2)Fe(II)Fe(III)(micro-OH)(2)](CF(3)SO(3))(3) (2), and [(alpha-BPMCN)(2)Fe(III)(2)(micro-O)(micro-OH)](CF(3)SO(3))(3) (3) (BPMCN = N,N'-dimethyl-N,N'-bis(2-pyridylmethyl)-trans-1,2-diaminocyclohexane). Stepwise one-electron oxidations of 1 to 2 and then to 3 demonstrate the versatility of the Fe(micro-O(H))(2)Fe diamond core to support a number of oxidation states with little structural rearrangement. Insight into the electronic structure of 1, 2', and 3 has been obtained from a detailed Mössbauer investigation (2' differs from 2 in having a different complement of counterions). Mixed-valence complex 2' is ferromagnetically coupled, with J = -15 +/- 5 cm(-)(1) (H = JS(1).S(2)). For the S = (9)/(2) ground multiplet we have determined the zero-field splitting parameter, D(9/2) = -1.5 +/- 0.1 cm(-)(1), and the hyperfine parameters of the ferric and ferrous sites. For T < 12 K, the S = (9)/(2) multiplet has uncommon relaxation behavior. Thus, M(S) = -(9)/(2) <--> M(S) = +(9)/(2) ground state transition is slow while deltaM(S) = +/-1 transitions between equally signed M(S) levels are fast on the time scale of Mössbauer spectroscopy. Below 100 K, complex 2' is trapped in the Fe(1)(III)Fe(2)(II) ground state; above this temperature, it exhibits thermally assisted electron hopping into the state Fe(1)(II)Fe(2)(III). The temperature dependence of the isomer shifts was corrected for second-order Doppler shift, obtained from the study of diferrous 1. The resultant true shifts were analyzed in a two-state hopping model. The diferric complex 3 is antiferromagnetically coupled with J = 90 +/- 15 cm(-)(1), estimated from a variable-temperature Mössbauer analysis.

Keywords:
Chemistry Methane monooxygenase Mössbauer spectroscopy Crystallography Ligand (biochemistry) Valence (chemistry) Lepidocrocite Ribonucleotide reductase Stereochemistry Enzyme Physical chemistry

Metrics

45
Cited By
3.10
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
29
Refs
0.91
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Metal-Catalyzed Oxygenation Mechanisms
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Inorganic Chemistry
Hemoglobin structure and function
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Cell Biology
Porphyrin and Phthalocyanine Chemistry
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

Fe(I)-Mediated Reductive Cleavage and Coupling of CO2:  An FeII(μ-O,μ-CO)FeII Core

Connie C. LuCaroline T. SaoumaMichael W. DayJonas C. Peters

Journal:   Journal of the American Chemical Society Year: 2006 Vol: 129 (1)Pages: 4-5
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Investigations on Butterfly Fe/S Cluster S-Centered Anions (μ-S-)2Fe2(CO)6, (μ-S-)(μ-RS)Fe2(CO)6, and Related Species

Li‐Cheng Song

Journal:   Accounts of Chemical Research Year: 2004 Vol: 38 (1)Pages: 21-28
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.