TY - JOUR
T1 - Revealing Redox Isomerism in Trichromium Imides by Anomalous Diffraction
AU - Musgrave, Rebecca
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by grants to TAB from the NIH (GM-098395), DOE (DE-SC0008313), and Harvard University. AKB is grateful for support from a Smith Family Graduate Science and Engineering Fellowship. RAM gratefully acknowledges postdoctoral support from the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under grant agreement No. 752684. CEJ acknowledges support from an NSF predoctoral fellowship. TAB gratefully acknowledges support from the Dreyfus Foundation (Teacher–Scholar Award). ChemMatCARS Sector 15 is supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. NSF/CHE-1834750. This research used resources of the Advanced Photon Source, a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility operated for the DOE Office of Science by Argonne National Laboratory under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357. The authors are grateful for the assistance of Dr Shao-Liang Zheng with X-ray analysis and would like to thank Dr Justin J. Teesdale and Dr Carmela Cuomo for helpful discussions.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Royal Society of Chemistry.
PY - 2021/12/21
Y1 - 2021/12/21
N2 - In polynuclear biological active sites, multiple electrons are needed for turnover, and the distribution of these electrons among the metal sites is affected by the structure of the active site. However, the study of the interplay between structure and redox distribution is difficult not only in biological systems but also in synthetic polynuclear clusters since most redox changes produce only one thermodynamically stable product. Here, the unusual chemistry of a sterically hindered trichromium complex allowed us to probe the relationship between structural and redox isomerism. Two structurally isomeric trichromium imides were isolated: asymmetric terminal imide (tbsL)Cr3(NDipp) and symmetric, μ3-bridging imide (tbsL)Cr3(μ3-NBn) ((tbsL)6- = (1,3,5-C6H9(NC6H4-o-NSitBuMe2)3)6-). Along with the homovalent isocyanide adduct (tbsL)Cr3(CNBn) and the bisimide (tbsL)Cr3(μ3-NPh)(NPh), both imide isomers were examined by multiple-wavelength anomalous diffraction (MAD) to determine the redox load distribution by the free refinement of atomic scattering factors. Despite their compositional similarities, the bridging imide shows uniform oxidation of all three Cr sites while the terminal imide shows oxidation at only two Cr sites. Further oxidation from the bridging imide to the bisimide is only borne at the Cr site bound to the second, terminal imido fragment. Thus, depending on the structural motifs present in each [Cr3] complex, MAD revealed complete localization of oxidation, partial localization, and complete delocalization, all supported by the same hexadentate ligand scaffold. This journal is
AB - In polynuclear biological active sites, multiple electrons are needed for turnover, and the distribution of these electrons among the metal sites is affected by the structure of the active site. However, the study of the interplay between structure and redox distribution is difficult not only in biological systems but also in synthetic polynuclear clusters since most redox changes produce only one thermodynamically stable product. Here, the unusual chemistry of a sterically hindered trichromium complex allowed us to probe the relationship between structural and redox isomerism. Two structurally isomeric trichromium imides were isolated: asymmetric terminal imide (tbsL)Cr3(NDipp) and symmetric, μ3-bridging imide (tbsL)Cr3(μ3-NBn) ((tbsL)6- = (1,3,5-C6H9(NC6H4-o-NSitBuMe2)3)6-). Along with the homovalent isocyanide adduct (tbsL)Cr3(CNBn) and the bisimide (tbsL)Cr3(μ3-NPh)(NPh), both imide isomers were examined by multiple-wavelength anomalous diffraction (MAD) to determine the redox load distribution by the free refinement of atomic scattering factors. Despite their compositional similarities, the bridging imide shows uniform oxidation of all three Cr sites while the terminal imide shows oxidation at only two Cr sites. Further oxidation from the bridging imide to the bisimide is only borne at the Cr site bound to the second, terminal imido fragment. Thus, depending on the structural motifs present in each [Cr3] complex, MAD revealed complete localization of oxidation, partial localization, and complete delocalization, all supported by the same hexadentate ligand scaffold. This journal is
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85121124513&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1039/D1SC04819H
DO - 10.1039/D1SC04819H
M3 - Article
SN - 2041-6520
VL - 12
SP - 15739
EP - 15749
JO - Chemical Science
JF - Chemical Science
IS - 47
ER -