4.7 Article

Mono- and dinuclear manganese(III) complexes showing efficient catechol oxidase activity: syntheses, characterization and spectroscopic studies

Journal

DALTON TRANSACTIONS
Volume -, Issue 40, Pages 8755-8764

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/b902498k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi [01(1871)/03/EMR-II]
  2. DST, India [SR/FTP/CS14/06]

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Four side-off compartmental ligands L-1-L-4 [L-1 = N,N'-ethylenebis(3-formyl-5-methyl-salicylaldimine), L-2 = N,N'-1-methylethylenebis(3-formyl-5-methylsalicylaldimine), L-3 = N,N'-1,1-dimethyl-ethylenebis(3-formyl-5-methylsalicylaldimine) and L-4 = N,N'-cyclohexenebis(3-formyl-5methylsalicylaldimine)] having two binding sites, N2O2 and O-4, have been chosen to synthesize mononuclear and dinuclear manganese(III) complexes with the aim to study their catecholase activity using 3,5-di-tert-butylcatechol (3,5-DTBC) as substrate in the presence of molecular oxygen. In all cases only mononuclear manganese complexes (1-4) were obtained, with manganese coordination taking place at the N2O2 binding site only, irrespective of the amount of manganese salt used. All these complexes have been characterized by routine physico-chemical techniques. Complex (MnLCl)-Cl-2 center dot 4H(2)O (2) has further been structurally characterized by X-ray single crystal structure analysis. Four dinuclear manganese complexes, 5-8, were obtained after condensing the two pending formyl groups on each ligand (L-1-L-4) with aniline followed by reaction with MnCl2 to put the second Mn atom onto another N2O2 site. The catalytic activity of all complexes 1-8 has been investigated following the oxidation of 3,5-di-tert-butylcatechol (3,5-DTBC) to 3,5-di-tert-butylbenzoquinone (3,5-DTBQ) with molecular oxygen in two different solvents, methanol and acetonitrile. The study reveals that the catalytic activity is influenced by the solvent and to a significant extent by the backbone of the diamine and the behavior seems to be related mainly to steric rather than electronic factors. Experimental data suggest that a correlation, the lower the E-1/2 value the higher the catalytic activity, can be drawn between E-1/2 and V-max of the complexes in a particular solvent. The EPR measurements suggest that the catalytic property of the complexes is related to the metal center(s) participation rather than to a radical mechanism.

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