Unraveling Chlorite Oxidation Pathways in Equatorially Heteroatom-Substituted Nonheme Iron Complexes

ACS Org Inorg Au. 2024 Sep 20;4(6):673-680. doi: 10.1021/acsorginorgau.4c00045. eCollection 2024 Dec 4.

Abstract

The first-coordination sphere of catalysts is known to play a crucial role in reaction mechanisms, but details of how equatorial ligands influence the reactivity remain unknown. Heteroatom ligated to the equatorial position of iron centers in nonheme iron metalloenzymes modulates structure and reactivity. To investigate the impact of equatorial heteroatom substitution on chlorite oxidation, we synthesized and characterized three novel mononuclear nonheme iron(II) complexes with a pentadentate bispidine scaffold. These complexes feature systematic substitutions at the equatorial position in the bispidine ligand framework where the pyridine group is replaced with NMe2, SMe, and OMe groups. The three iron(II)-bispidine complexes were subjected to studies in chlorite oxidation reactions as a model pathway for oxygen atom transfer. Chlorine oxyanions, which have the halide in an oxidation state ranging from +1 to +7, have numerous applications but can contaminate water bodies, and this demands urgent environmental remediation. Chlorite, a common precursor to chlorine dioxide, is of particular interest due to the superior antimicrobial activity of chlorine dioxide. Moreover, its generation leads to fewer harmful byproducts in water treatment. Here, we demonstrate that these complexes can produce chlorine dioxide from chlorite in acetate buffer at room temperature and pH 5.0, oxidizing chlorite through the in situ formation of high-valent iron(IV)-oxo intermediates. This study establishes how subtle changes in the coordination sphere around iron can influence the reactivity.