4.6 Article

Switching Site Reactivity in Hydrogenase Model Systems by Introducing a Pendant Amine Ligand

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 6, Issue 6, Pages 4192-4203

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.0c04901

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation)-TRR 63 Integrated Chemical Processes in Liquid Multiphase Systems (subproject A4) [56091768]

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This study demonstrates that by introducing a nitrogen base atom in the phosphine ligand, the reactivity of the active site can be significantly altered. Despite almost identical structural and spectroscopic properties, the addition of a nitrogen base atom in complex 2 leads to a marked change in site reactivity.
Hydrogenases are versatile enzymatic catalysts with an unmet hydrogen evolution reactivity (HER) from synthetic bio-inspired systems. The binuclear active site only has one-site reactivity of the distal Fe-d atom. Here, binuclear complexes [Fe-2(CO)(5)(mu-Mebdt)(P(4-C6H4OCH3)(3))] 1 and [Fe-2(CO)(5)(mu-Mebdt)(PPh2Py)] 2 are presented, which show electrocatalytic activity in the presence of weak acids as a proton source for the HER. Despite almost identical structural and spectroscopic properties (bond distances and angles from single-crystal X-ray; IR, UV/vis, and NMR), introduction of a nitrogen base atom in the phosphine ligand in 2 markedly changes site reactivity. The bridging benzenedithiolate ligand Mebdt interacts with the terminal ligand's phenyl aromatic rings and stabilizes the reduced states of the catalysts. Although 1 with monodentate phosphine terminal ligands only shows a distal iron atom HER activity by a sequence of electrochemical and protonation steps, the lone pair of pyridine nitrogen in 2 acts as the primary site of protonation. This swaps the iron atom catalytic activity toward the proximal iron for complex 2. Density-functional theory (DFT) calculations reveal the role of terminal phosphines ligands without/with pendant amines by directing the proton transfer steps. The reactivity of 1 is a thiol-based protonation of a dangling bond in 1(-) and distal iron hydride mechanism, which may follow either an ECEC or EECC sequence, depending on the choice of acid. The pendant amine in 2 enables a terminal ligand protonation and an ECEC reactivity. The introduction of a terminal nitrogen atom enables the control of site reactivity in a binuclear system.

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