X‑ray
Spectroscopic Study of the Electronic
Structure of a Trigonal High-Spin Fe(IV)O Complex Modeling
Non-Heme Enzyme Intermediates and Their Reactivity
posted on 2023-08-17, 20:43authored byAugustin Braun, Leland B. Gee, Michael W. Mara, Ethan A. Hill, Thomas Kroll, Dennis Nordlund, Dimosthenis Sokaras, Pieter Glatzel, Britt Hedman, Keith O. Hodgson, A. S. Borovik, Michael L. Baker, Edward I. Solomon
Fe
K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) has long been used
for the study of high-valent iron intermediates in biological and
artificial catalysts. 4p-mixing into the 3d orbitals complicates the
pre-edge analysis but when correctly understood via 1s2p resonant
inelastic X-ray scattering and Fe L-edge XAS, it enables deeper insight
into the geometric structure and correlates with the electronic structure
and reactivity. This study shows that in addition to the 4p-mixing
into the 3dz2 orbital due to
the short iron–oxo bond, the loss of inversion in the equatorial
plane leads to 4p mixing into the 3dx2–y2,xy,
providing structural insight and allowing the distinction of 6- vs
5-coordinate active sites as shown through application to the Fe(IV)O
intermediate of taurine dioxygenase. Combined with O K-edge XAS, this
study gives an unprecedented experimental insight into the electronic
structure of Fe(IV)O active sites and their selectivity for
reactivity enabled by the π-pathway involving the 3dxz/yz orbitals. Finally, the large
effect of spin polarization is experimentally assigned in the pre-edge
(i.e., the α/β splitting) and found to be better modeled
by multiplet simulations rather than by commonly used time-dependent
density functional theory.