| Literature DB >> 17534493 |
Suranjana Das1, Subrata Mukhopadhyay.
Abstract
[MnIV3(micro-O)4(phen)4(H2O)2]4+ (, phen=1,10-phenanthroline) equilibrates with its conjugate base [Mn3(micro-O)4(phen)4(H2O)(OH)]3+ in aqueous solution. Among the several synthetic multinuclear oxo- and/or carboxylato bridged manganese complexes known to date containing metal-bound water, to the best of our knowledge, only deprotonates (right harpoon over left harpoon+H+, pKa=4.00 (+/-0.15) at 25.0 degrees C, I=1.0 M, maintained with NaNO3) at physiological pH. An aqueous solution of quantitatively oxidises NIII (HNO2 and NO2-) to NO3- within pH 2.3-4.1, the end manganese state being MnII. Both and are reactive oxidants in the title redox. In contrast to a common observation that anions react quicker than their conjugate acids in reducing metal centred oxidants, HNO2 reacts faster than NO2- in reducing or . The observed rates of nitrite oxidation do not depend on the variation of 1,10-phenanthroline content of the solution indicating that the MnIV-bound phen ligands do not dissociate in solution under experimental conditions. Also, there was no kinetic evidence for any kind of pre-equilibrium replacement of MnIV-bound water by nitrite prior to electron transfer which indicates the substitution-inert nature of the MnIV-bound waters and the 1,10-phenanthroline ligands. The MnIV3 to MnII transition in the present observation proceeds through the intermediate generation of the spectrally characterised mixed-valent MnIIIMnIV dimer that quickly produces MnII. The reaction rates are substantially lowered when solvent H2O is replaced by D2O and a rate determining 1e, 1H+ electroprotic mechanism is proposed.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17534493 DOI: 10.1039/b702740k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dalton Trans ISSN: 1477-9226 Impact factor: 4.390