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Proton-triggered chemoselective halogenation of aliphatic C–H bonds with nonheme FeIV-oxo complexes.

Authors :
Pagès-Vilà, Neus
Gamba, Ilaria
Clémancey, Martin
Latour, Jean-Marc
Company, Anna
Costas, Miquel
Source :
Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry. Oct2024, Vol. 259, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Halogenation of aliphatic C–H bonds is a chemical transformation performed in nature by mononuclear nonheme iron dependent halogenases. The mechanism involves the formation of an iron(IV)-oxo-chloride species that abstracts the hydrogen atom from the reactive C–H bond to form a carbon-centered radical that selectively reacts with the bound chloride ligand, a process commonly referred to as halide rebound. The factors that determine the halide rebound, as opposed to the reaction with the incipient hydroxide ligand, are not clearly understood and examples of well-defined iron(IV)-oxo-halide compounds competent in C–H halogenation are scarce. In this work we have studied the reactivity of three well-defined iron(IV)-oxo complexes containing variants of the tetradentate 1-(2-pyridylmethyl)-1,4,7-triazacyclononane ligand (Pytacn). Interestingly, these compounds exhibit a change in their chemoselectivity towards the functionalization of C–H bonds under certain conditions: their reaction towards C–H bonds in the presence of a halide anionleads to exclusive oxygenation, while the addition of a superacid results in halogenation. Almost quantitative halogenation of ethylbenzene is observed when using the two systems with more sterically congested ligands and even the chlorination of strong C–H bonds such as those of cyclohexane is performed when a methyl group is present in the sixth position of the pyridine ring of the ligand. Mechanistic studies suggest that both reactions, oxygenation and halogenation, proceed through a common rate determining hydrogen atom transfer step and the presence of the acid dictates the fate of the resulting alkyl radical towards preferential halogenation over oxygenation. Synopsis. The prepared iron(IV)-oxo complexes are competent to perform the activation of aliphatic CH bonds. When chloride anions are present in the reaction media, the addition of a superacid completely diverts the reaction chemoselectivity affording preferential chlorination over oxygenation. [Display omitted] • Iron(IV)-oxo complexes halogenate CH bonds in the presence of a strong acid. • The presence of the acid favors halogenation over oxygenation. • Weak-field ligands increase the halogenation efficiency and the reactivity. • The chemoselectivity is dictated after the hydrogen atom transfer step. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01620134
Volume :
259
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178787276
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2024.112643