| Literature DB >> 27991599 |
Mironel Enescu1, Kathryn L Nagy2, Alain Manceau3.
Abstract
Metal sulfide minerals are assumed to form naturally at ambient conditions via reaction of a metallic element with (poly)sulfide ions, usually produced by microbes in oxygen-depleted environments. Recently, the formation of mercury sulfide (β-HgS) directly from linear Hg(II)-thiolate complexes (Hg(SR)2) in natural organic matter and in cysteine solutions was demonstrated under aerated conditions. Here, a detailed description of this non-sulfidic reaction is provided by computations at a high level of molecular-orbital theory. The HgS stoichiometry is obtained through the cleavage of the S-C bond in one thiolate, transfer of the resulting alkyl group (R') to another thiolate, and subsequent elimination of a sulfur atom from the second thiolate as a thioether (RSR'). Repetition of this mechanism leads to the formation of RS-(HgS)n-R chains which may self-assemble in parallel arrays to form cinnabar (α-HgS), or more commonly, quickly condense to four-coordinate metacinnabar (β-HgS). The mechanistic pathway is thermodynamically favorable and its predicted kinetics agrees with experiment. The results provide robust theoretical support for the abiotic natural formation of nanoparticulate HgS under oxic conditions and in the absence of a catalyst, and suggest a new route for the (bio)synthesis of HgS nanoparticles with improved technological properties.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27991599 PMCID: PMC5171843 DOI: 10.1038/srep39359
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Mechanistic pathway of formation of a Hg(II) sulfide dimer by dealkylation38 of two Hg-thiolate complexes.
Gibbs free energy diagram (at 298 K and 1 atm) of the cleavage of the S-C bond by an alkyl group transfer between two linear Hg-thiolate complexes, and optimized structures for the reaction pathway with four explicit water molecules (not shown for clarity). The height of the activation-energy barrier for the alkyl group transfer relative to the free reactant state decreases from 39.1 kcal mol−1 to 36.2 kcal mol−1 with two explicit water molecules, to 34.7 kcal mol−1 with four, and to 31.9 kcal mol−1 with seven. The final value, corrected for overestimation of the solvation entropy in the continuum solvation models is 22 kcal mol−1. The same correction applies to the IP and PC states (corrected levels not shown). FR = free reactants; TS = transition state; IP = intermediate product; PC = product complex; FP = free products. Bond lengths are in angstroms. Dark red, Hg; yellow, thiolate sulfur SR− and sulfide sulfur HgSHg; orange, thioether sulfur RSR; dark gray, C; light gray, H. Cartesian coordinates are given in the Supplementary Materials.
Figure 2Formation of cinnabar by association of -S-(Hg-S)n-Hg-S- chains.
(a) Hg6S7(CH3)2 model optimized in aqueous solution with the CPCM model. Hg-S-Hg angles are in black. Atomic charges, in units of elementary charge e and calculated by natural population analysis (NPA)61, are in blue. Hg (dark red) has a natural charge of +1.0 e, sulfide S (yellow) of -1.0 e, thiol S (yellow) of −0.4 e, C (dark gray) of −0.7 e, and H (light gray) of +0.2 e (not represented). (b) Three parallel -S-(Hg-S)n-Hg-S- chains in cinnabar38. (c) Cinnabar as an assemblage of replicated chains. d) Best superposition of the trimer 3[Hg4S5H2] optimized in aqueous solution (red, H atoms not shown) and three fragments of adjacent Hg4S5 chains from the structure of cinnabar (blue).