| Literature DB >> 24950328 |
Dianne J Xiao1, Eric D Bloch1, Jarad A Mason1, Wendy L Queen2, Matthew R Hudson3, Nora Planas4, Joshua Borycz4, Allison L Dzubak4, Pragya Verma4, Kyuho Lee2, Francesca Bonino5, Valentina Crocellà5, Junko Yano6, Silvia Bordiga5, Donald G Truhlar4, Laura Gagliardi4, Craig M Brown7, Jeffrey R Long8.
Abstract
Enzymatic haem and non-haem high-valent iron-oxo species are known to activate strong C-H bonds, yet duplicating this reactivity in a synthetic system remains a formidable challenge. Although instability of the terminal iron-oxo moiety is perhaps the foremost obstacle, steric and electronic factors also limit the activity of previously reported mononuclear iron(IV)-oxo compounds. In particular, although nature's non-haem iron(IV)-oxo compounds possess high-spin S = 2 ground states, this electronic configuration has proved difficult to achieve in a molecular species. These challenges may be mitigated within metal-organic frameworks that feature site-isolated iron centres in a constrained, weak-field ligand environment. Here, we show that the metal-organic framework Fe2(dobdc) (dobdc(4-) = 2,5-dioxido-1,4-benzenedicarboxylate) and its magnesium-diluted analogue, Fe0.1Mg1.9(dobdc), are able to activate the C-H bonds of ethane and convert it into ethanol and acetaldehyde using nitrous oxide as the terminal oxidant. Electronic structure calculations indicate that the active oxidant is likely to be a high-spin S = 2 iron(IV)-oxo species.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24950328 DOI: 10.1038/nchem.1956
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.427