4.7 Article

Mechanism of Oxygen Atom Transfer from FeV(O) to Olefins at Room Temperature

Journal

INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 54, Issue 13, Pages 6112-6121

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ic503053q

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DST, New Delhi (SERB) [EMR/2014/000106]
  2. CSIR (Delhi)

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In biological oxidations, the intermediate Fe-V(0)(OH) has been proposed to be the active species for catalyzing the epoxidation of alkenes by nonheme iron complexes. However, no study has been reported yet that elucidates the mechanism of direct O-atom transfer during the reaction of Fe-V(0) with alkenes to form the corresponding epoxide. For the first time, we study the mechanism of O-atom transfer to alkenes using the Fe-V(0) complex of biuret-modified Fe-TAML at room temperature. The second-order rate constant (k(2)) for the reaction of different alkenes with Fe-V(0) was determined under single-turnover conditions. An 8000-fold rate difference was found between electron-rich (4-methoxystyrene; k(2) = 216 M-1 s(-1)) and electron-deficient (methyl transcinnamate; k(2) = 0.03 M-1 s(-1)) substrates. This rate difference indicates the electrophilic character of Fe-V(0). The use of cis-stilbene as a mechanistic probe leads to the formation of both cis- and trans-stilbene epoxides (73:27). This suggests the formation of a radical intermediate, which would allow C-C bond rotation to yield both stereoisomers of stilbene-epoxide. Additionally, a Hammett rho value of -0.56 was obtained for the para-substituted styrene derivatives. Detailed DFT calculations show that the reaction proceeds via a two-step process through a doublet spin surface. Finally, using biuret-modified Fe-TAML as the catalyst and NaOCl as the oxidant under catalytic conditions epoxide was formed with modest yields and turnover numbers.

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