| Literature DB >> 20300473 |
Sarah B Bateni1, Kellie R England, Anthony T Galatti, Handeep Kaur, Victor A Mendiola, Alexander R Mitchell, Michael H Vu, Benjamin F Gherman, James A Miranda.
Abstract
The electron affinities (EAs) of a training set of 19 metal-salen compounds were calculated using density functional theory. Concurrently, the experimental reduction potentials for the training set were measured using cyclic voltammetry. The EAs and reduction potentials were found to be linearly correlated by metal. The reduction potentials of a test set of 14 different metal-salens were then measured and compared to the predicted reduction potentials based upon the training set correlation. The method was found to work well, with a mean unsigned error of 99 mV for the entire test set. This method could be used to predict the reduction potentials of a variety of metal-salen compounds, an important class of coordination compounds used in synthetic organic electrochemistry as electrocatalysts.Entities:
Keywords: density functional theory; electron affinity; metal-salen; reduction potential
Year: 2009 PMID: 20300473 PMCID: PMC2839914 DOI: 10.3762/bjoc.5.82
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Org Chem ISSN: 1860-5397 Impact factor: 2.883
Figure 1Training set of 19 metal-salens.
Figure 2Correlation between electron affinity (EA) and Hammett σp parameter in the training set (R2 = 0.76, 0.72, and 0.81 for Ni, Co, and Cu, respectively).
Figure 3Correlation between E and EA for the Ni, Co, and Cu training set metal-salens (R2 = 0.93, 0.17 (0.63 excluding salen 10), and 0.86 for Ni, Co, and Cu, respectively).
Figure 4Comparison of experimental and predicted E for all training set metal-salens.
Figure 5Test set of 14 metal-salens.
Errors in the predicted E vs. experimental E values for the test set metal-salens.
| Pd-salens | Ni-salens | Fe-salens | entire test set | |
| mean signed error (mV) | −111 | 66 | −66 | −16 |
| mean unsigned error (mV) | 111 | 116 | 78 | 99 |