Theoretical Studies of Structures and Mechanisms in Organometallic and Bioinorganic Chemistry: Heck Reaction with Palladium Phosphines, Active Sites of Superoxide Reductase and Cytochrome P450 Monooxygenase, and Tetrairon Hexathiolate Hydrogenase Model
The electronic structures and reaction mechanisms of transition-metal complexes can be calculated accurately by density functional theory (DFT) in cooperation with the continuum solvation model. The palladium catalyzed Heck reaction, iron-model complexes for cytochrome P450 and superoxide reductase...
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ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-2009-05-2832013-01-08T10:41:02ZTheoretical Studies of Structures and Mechanisms in Organometallic and Bioinorganic Chemistry: Heck Reaction with Palladium Phosphines, Active Sites of Superoxide Reductase and Cytochrome P450 Monooxygenase, and Tetrairon Hexathiolate Hydrogenase ModelSurawatanawong, PanidaPalladiumHeck reactionSuperoxide ReductaseCytochrome P450HydrogenaseDensity Functional TheoryThe electronic structures and reaction mechanisms of transition-metal complexes can be calculated accurately by density functional theory (DFT) in cooperation with the continuum solvation model. The palladium catalyzed Heck reaction, iron-model complexes for cytochrome P450 and superoxide reductase (SOR), and tetrairon hexathiolate hydrogenase model were investigated. The DFT calculations on the catalytic Heck reaction (between phenyl-bromide and ethylene to form the styrene product), catalyzed by palladium diphosphine indicate a four-step mechanism: oxidative addition of C6H5Br, migratory insertion of C6H5 to C2H4, b-hydride transfer/olefin elimination of styrene product, and catalyst regeneration by removal of HBr. For the oxidative addition, the rate-determining step, the reaction through monophosphinopalladium complex is more favorable than that through either the diphosphinopalladium or ethylene-bound monophosphinopalladium. In further study, for a steric phosphine, PtBu3, the oxidative-addition barrier is lower on monopalladium monophosphine than dipalladium diphosphine whereas for a small phosphine, PMe3, the oxidative addition proceeds more easily via dipalladium diphosphine. Of the phosphine-free palladium complexes examined: free-Pd, PdBr-, and Pd(h2-C2H4), the olefin-coordinated intermediate has the lowest barrier for the oxidativeaddition. P450 and SOR have the same first-coordination-sphere, Fe[N4S], at their active sites but proceed through different reaction paths. The different ground spin states of the intermediate FeIII(OOH)(SCH3)(L) model {L = porphyrin for P450 and four imidazoles for SOR} produce geometric and electronic structures that assist i) the protonation on distal oxygen for P450, which leads to O-O bond cleavage and formation of (FeIV=O)(SCH3)(L) H2O, and ii) the protonation on proximal oxygen for SOR, which leads to (FeIII-HOOH)(SCH3)(L) formation before the Fe-O bond cleavage and H2O2 production. The hydrogen bonding from explicit waters also stabilizes FeIII-HOOH over FeIV=O H2O products in SOR. The electrochemical hydrogen production by Fe4[MeC(CH2S)3]2(CO)8 (1) with 2,6-dimethylpyridinium (LutH ) were studied by the DFT calculations of proton-transfer free energies relative to LutH and reduction potentials (vs. Fc/Fc ) of possible intermediates. In hydrogen production by 1, the second, more highly reductive, applied potential (-1.58 V) has the advantage over the first applied potential (-1.22 V) in that the more highly reduced intermediates can more easily add protons to produce H2.Hall, Michael B.2010-07-15T00:11:10Z2010-07-23T21:42:53Z2010-07-15T00:11:10Z2010-07-23T21:42:53Z2009-052010-07-14May 2009BookThesisElectronic Dissertationtextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-05-283eng |
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Palladium Heck reaction Superoxide Reductase Cytochrome P450 Hydrogenase Density Functional Theory |
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Palladium Heck reaction Superoxide Reductase Cytochrome P450 Hydrogenase Density Functional Theory Surawatanawong, Panida Theoretical Studies of Structures and Mechanisms in Organometallic and Bioinorganic Chemistry: Heck Reaction with Palladium Phosphines, Active Sites of Superoxide Reductase and Cytochrome P450 Monooxygenase, and Tetrairon Hexathiolate Hydrogenase Model |
description |
The electronic structures and reaction mechanisms of transition-metal complexes
can be calculated accurately by density functional theory (DFT) in cooperation with the
continuum solvation model. The palladium catalyzed Heck reaction, iron-model
complexes for cytochrome P450 and superoxide reductase (SOR), and tetrairon
hexathiolate hydrogenase model were investigated.
The DFT calculations on the catalytic Heck reaction (between phenyl-bromide
and ethylene to form the styrene product), catalyzed by palladium diphosphine indicate a
four-step mechanism: oxidative addition of C6H5Br, migratory insertion of C6H5 to
C2H4, b-hydride transfer/olefin elimination of styrene product, and catalyst regeneration
by removal of HBr. For the oxidative addition, the rate-determining step, the reaction
through monophosphinopalladium complex is more favorable than that through either
the diphosphinopalladium or ethylene-bound monophosphinopalladium. In further
study, for a steric phosphine, PtBu3, the oxidative-addition barrier is lower on monopalladium monophosphine than dipalladium diphosphine whereas for a small
phosphine, PMe3, the oxidative addition proceeds more easily via dipalladium
diphosphine. Of the phosphine-free palladium complexes examined: free-Pd, PdBr-, and
Pd(h2-C2H4), the olefin-coordinated intermediate has the lowest barrier for the oxidativeaddition.
P450 and SOR have the same first-coordination-sphere, Fe[N4S], at their active
sites but proceed through different reaction paths. The different ground spin states of the
intermediate FeIII(OOH)(SCH3)(L) model {L = porphyrin for P450 and four imidazoles
for SOR} produce geometric and electronic structures that assist i) the protonation on
distal oxygen for P450, which leads to O-O bond cleavage and formation of
(FeIV=O)(SCH3)(L) H2O, and ii) the protonation on proximal oxygen for SOR, which
leads to (FeIII-HOOH)(SCH3)(L) formation before the Fe-O bond cleavage and H2O2
production. The hydrogen bonding from explicit waters also stabilizes FeIII-HOOH over
FeIV=O H2O products in SOR.
The electrochemical hydrogen production by Fe4[MeC(CH2S)3]2(CO)8 (1) with
2,6-dimethylpyridinium (LutH ) were studied by the DFT calculations of proton-transfer
free energies relative to LutH and reduction potentials (vs. Fc/Fc ) of possible
intermediates. In hydrogen production by 1, the second, more highly reductive, applied
potential (-1.58 V) has the advantage over the first applied potential (-1.22 V) in that the
more highly reduced intermediates can more easily add protons to produce H2. |
author2 |
Hall, Michael B. |
author_facet |
Hall, Michael B. Surawatanawong, Panida |
author |
Surawatanawong, Panida |
author_sort |
Surawatanawong, Panida |
title |
Theoretical Studies of Structures and Mechanisms in Organometallic and Bioinorganic Chemistry: Heck Reaction with Palladium Phosphines, Active Sites of Superoxide Reductase and Cytochrome P450 Monooxygenase, and Tetrairon Hexathiolate Hydrogenase Model |
title_short |
Theoretical Studies of Structures and Mechanisms in Organometallic and Bioinorganic Chemistry: Heck Reaction with Palladium Phosphines, Active Sites of Superoxide Reductase and Cytochrome P450 Monooxygenase, and Tetrairon Hexathiolate Hydrogenase Model |
title_full |
Theoretical Studies of Structures and Mechanisms in Organometallic and Bioinorganic Chemistry: Heck Reaction with Palladium Phosphines, Active Sites of Superoxide Reductase and Cytochrome P450 Monooxygenase, and Tetrairon Hexathiolate Hydrogenase Model |
title_fullStr |
Theoretical Studies of Structures and Mechanisms in Organometallic and Bioinorganic Chemistry: Heck Reaction with Palladium Phosphines, Active Sites of Superoxide Reductase and Cytochrome P450 Monooxygenase, and Tetrairon Hexathiolate Hydrogenase Model |
title_full_unstemmed |
Theoretical Studies of Structures and Mechanisms in Organometallic and Bioinorganic Chemistry: Heck Reaction with Palladium Phosphines, Active Sites of Superoxide Reductase and Cytochrome P450 Monooxygenase, and Tetrairon Hexathiolate Hydrogenase Model |
title_sort |
theoretical studies of structures and mechanisms in organometallic and bioinorganic chemistry: heck reaction with palladium phosphines, active sites of superoxide reductase and cytochrome p450 monooxygenase, and tetrairon hexathiolate hydrogenase model |
publishDate |
2010 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-05-283 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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1716504495028961280 |