Iron(III) Ejection from a “Beheaded”
TAML Activator: Catalytically Relevant Mechanistic Insight into the
Deceleration of Electrophilic Processes by Electron Donors
posted on 2017-08-22, 14:01authored byMatthew R. Mills, Longzhu Q. Shen, David Z. Zhang, Alexander D. Ryabov, Terrence J. Collins
Kinetic
studies of the acid-induced ejection of iron(III) show that the more
electron-rich tetra-amido-N macrocyclic ligand (TAML) activator [FeIII{(Me2CNCOCMe2NCO)2CMe2}OH2]− (4), which does not have a benzene
ring in its head component (“beheaded” TAML), is up
to 1 × 104 times more resistant than much less electron-rich
[FeIII{1,2-C6H4(NCOCMe2NCO)2CMe2}OH2]− (1a) to the
electrophilic attack. This counterintuitive increased resistance is
seen in both the specific acid (kobs = k1[H+]/(K + [H+])) and phosphate general acid (kII = (kdiKa1 + ktri[H+])/(Ka1+[H+])) demetalation pathways. Insight into
this reactivity puzzle was obtained from coupling kinetic data with
theoretical density functional theory modeling. First, although 1a and related complexes are six-coordinate in water, 4 has a strong tendency to repel the second aqua ligand favoring
[LFe(OH2)]− and making appropriate the
comparison of monoaqua-4 with diaqua-1a in
the demetalation process. Second, dearomatization exerts a strong
effect on the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) energy of
five-coordinate monoaqua-4, the presumed target in proton-induced
demetalation, stabilizing it by ca. 51 kJ mol–1 compared
with monoaqua-1a. Third, the monoaqua-4 HOMO
is localized over the N–pπ system of all four
N donors in contrast with monoaqua-1a, where N–pπ contributions from the head amides only mix with the
aromatic ring π system. Fourth, addition of a second water ligand
to monoaqua-1a giving [LFe(OH2)2]− reshapes the monoaqua-1a HOMO by
shifting its entire locus from the head to the tail diamido-N sectionthis
HOMO is by 54 kJ mol–1 less stable than the monoaqua-4 HOMO. These features provide the foundations for mechanistic
conclusions concerning demetalation that (i) axial water ligands enable
a favored path in the six-coordinate case of 1a, where
a proton “slides” toward the Fe–N bond and (ii)
early and late transition states are realized for 4 and 1a, respectively, with a larger free energy of activation
for the beheaded TAML activator 4.