scholarly journals Semiempirical method for examining asynchronicity in metal–oxido-mediated C–H bond activation

2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (36) ◽  
pp. e2108648118
Author(s):  
Suman K. Barman ◽  
Meng-Yin Yang ◽  
Trenton H. Parsell ◽  
Michael T. Green ◽  
A. S. Borovik

The oxidation of substrates via the cleavage of thermodynamically strong C–H bonds is an essential part of mammalian metabolism. These reactions are predominantly carried out by enzymes that produce high-valent metal–oxido species, which are directly responsible for cleaving the C–H bonds. While much is known about the identity of these transient intermediates, the mechanistic factors that enable metal–oxido species to accomplish such difficult reactions are still incomplete. For synthetic metal–oxido species, C–H bond cleavage is often mechanistically described as synchronous, proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET). However, data have emerged that suggest that the basicity of the M–oxido unit is the key determinant in achieving enzymatic function, thus requiring alternative mechanisms whereby proton transfer (PT) has a more dominant role than electron transfer (ET). To bridge this knowledge gap, the reactivity of a monomeric MnIV–oxido complex with a series of external substrates was studied, resulting in a spread of over 104 in their second-order rate constants that tracked with the acidity of the C–H bonds. Mechanisms that included either synchronous PCET or rate-limiting PT, followed by ET, did not explain our results, which led to a proposed PCET mechanism with asynchronous transition states that are dominated by PT. To support this premise, we report a semiempirical free energy analysis that can predict the relative contributions of PT and ET for a given set of substrates. These findings underscore why the basicity of M–oxido units needs to be considered in C–H functionalization.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suong Nguyen ◽  
Phillip Murray ◽  
Robert Knowles

<div><p>Here we report a catalytic, light-driven method for the redox-neutral depolymerization of native lignin biomass at ambient temperature. This transformation proceeds via a proton-coupled electron-transfer (PCET) activation of an alcohol O–H bond to generate a key alkoxy radical intermediate, which then drives the <i>β</i>-scission of a vicinal C–C bond. Notably, this depolymerization is driven solely by visible light irradiation, requiring no stoichiometric chemical reagents and producing no stoichiometric waste. This method exhibits good efficiency and excellent selectivity for the activation and fragmentation of <i>β</i>-O-4 linkages in the polymer backbone, even in the presence of numerous other PCET-active functional groups. DFT analysis suggests that the key C–C bond cleavage reactions produce non-equilibrium product distributions, driven by excited-state redox events. These results provide further evidence that visible-light photocatalysis can serve as a viable method for the direct conversion of lignin biomass into valuable arene feedstocks.</p></div>


2018 ◽  
Vol 140 (46) ◽  
pp. 15641-15645 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elvira R. Sayfutyarova ◽  
Zachary K. Goldsmith ◽  
Sharon Hammes-Schiffer

2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. J. Fifen ◽  
Z. Dhaouadi ◽  
M. Nsangou ◽  
O. Holtomo ◽  
N. Jaidane

The distinction of concerted proton-coupled electron transfer (CPCET) from sequential one as well as proton transfer-electron transfer (PT-ET) from electron transfer-proton transfer (ET-PT) in the O–H bond cleavage reactions in various media has always been a difficult task. In this work, the activation barrier of the CPCET mechanism, its rate constants, and reaction free energies related to ET-PT and PT-ET involving coreactive species were presented as good parameters to attempt the problem. DFT calculations were carried out studying the described pathways subsequent to the scavenging of OH• and OBr- by the 3,4-DHPPA in various media. The solvation was described in a hybrid manner using IEF-PCM model conjointly with a model that takes into account some solute-solvent interactions. As a result, we found that the scavenging of hydroxyl radical by 3,4-DHPPA is thermodynamically governed by a one-step hydrogen atom transfer (CPCET) from the acid to the radical in all media. In kinetic viewpoint, CPCET still dominates in the vacuum and in nonpolar solvents, but in polar solvents it could compete strongly with the ET-PT mechanism so that the latter could slightly dominate.


CCS Chemistry ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 38-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heng Jiang ◽  
Armido Studer

This review covers the recent literature on oxidative generation of N-centered radicals using photoredox catalysis. The concept of proton-coupled electron transfer is briefly discussed. Applications of such reactive N-centered radicals in cascade processes comprising arene amidation, alkene amidation, C—C bond cleavage reactions, and remote C—H functionalization are addressed. In addition, novel reagents allowing for clean oxidative N-radical generation are discussed.


2006 ◽  
Vol 361 (1472) ◽  
pp. 1351-1364 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven Y Reece ◽  
Justin M Hodgkiss ◽  
JoAnne Stubbe ◽  
Daniel G Nocera

Charge transport and catalysis in enzymes often rely on amino acid radicals as intermediates. The generation and transport of these radicals are synonymous with proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET), which intrinsically is a quantum mechanical effect as both the electron and proton tunnel. The caveat to PCET is that proton transfer (PT) is fundamentally limited to short distances relative to electron transfer (ET). This predicament is resolved in biology by the evolution of enzymes to control PT and ET coordinates on highly different length scales. In doing so, the enzyme imparts exquisite thermodynamic and kinetic controls over radical transport and radical-based catalysis at cofactor active sites. This discussion will present model systems containing orthogonal ET and PT pathways, thereby allowing the proton and electron tunnelling events to be disentangled. Against this mechanistic backdrop, PCET catalysis of oxygen–oxygen bond activation by mono-oxygenases is captured at biomimetic porphyrin redox platforms. The discussion concludes with the case study of radical-based quantum catalysis in a natural biological enzyme, class I Escherichia coli ribonucleotide reductase. Studies are presented that show the enzyme utilizes both collinear and orthogonal PCET to transport charge from an assembled diiron-tyrosyl radical cofactor to the active site over 35 Å away via an amino acid radical-hopping pathway spanning two protein subunits.


Author(s):  
Suong Nguyen ◽  
Phillip Murray ◽  
Robert Knowles

<div><p>Here we report a catalytic, light-driven method for the redox-neutral depolymerization of native lignin biomass at ambient temperature. This transformation proceeds via a proton-coupled electron-transfer (PCET) activation of an alcohol O–H bond to generate a key alkoxy radical intermediate, which then drives the <i>β</i>-scission of a vicinal C–C bond. Notably, this depolymerization is driven solely by visible light irradiation, requiring no stoichiometric chemical reagents and producing no stoichiometric waste. This method exhibits good efficiency and excellent selectivity for the activation and fragmentation of <i>β</i>-O-4 linkages in the polymer backbone, even in the presence of numerous other PCET-active functional groups. DFT analysis suggests that the key C–C bond cleavage reactions produce non-equilibrium product distributions, driven by excited-state redox events. These results provide further evidence that visible-light photocatalysis can serve as a viable method for the direct conversion of lignin biomass into valuable arene feedstocks.</p></div>


2018 ◽  
Vol 20 (7) ◽  
pp. 4793-4804 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josep M. Anglada ◽  
Ramon Crehuet ◽  
Sarju Adhikari ◽  
Joseph S. Francisco ◽  
Yu Xia

Hydropersulfides (RSSH) are highly reactive towards OH radical, and depending on the nature of R substitute, a selective OH substitution with S–S bond cleavage competes with the hydrogen abstraction by the radical.


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