A DFT study of protonation thermodynamics in H-2-evolving biomimetic catalysts related to [FeFe]-hydrogenases active site is presented here. Taking as a reference system the electrocatalytic dihydrogen evolution mechanism recently proposed for the synthetic assembly [Fe-2(CO)(4)(kappa(2)-Ph2PCH2CH2PPh2)(mu-S(CH2)(3)S)] (a, which is able to release H-2 after having undergone monoelectron reduction steps and three sequential protonation reactions), we show how the reduction of model complexes to oxidation states lower than those observed in [FeFe]-hydrogenases cofactor leads to a protonation regiochemistry that has no counterpart in the enzymatic mechanism of H-2 production. In particular, double protonation of the metal centers turned out to be disfavored in a by up to 12.5 kcal mol(-1) with respect to alternative protonation paths; as for the regiochemistry of triple protonation, the formation of eta(2)-H-2 adducts is disfavored by at least similar to 25 kcal mol(-1). Structural analysis of the theoretical models also revealed that over-reduction of synthetic complexes, though necessary for observing H-2 evolution from the currently available biomimetic electrocatalysts, can generally impair their structural integrity. Possible approaches for the modulation of protonation regiochemistry are then proposed; in particular, it turned out that a targeted use of sigma-donating ligands showing low basicity can favor double protonation of iron centers

Greco, C., Fantucci, P., De Gioia, L., Suarez-Bertoa, R., Bruschi, M., Talarmin, J., et al. (2010). Electrocatalytic dihydrogen evolution mechanism of [Fe-2(CO)(4)(kappa(2)-Ph2PCH2CH2PPh2)(mu-S(CH2)(3)S)] and related models of the [FeFe]-hydrogenases active site: a DFT investigation. DALTON TRANSACTIONS, 39(31), 7320-7329 [10.1039/b926040d].

Electrocatalytic dihydrogen evolution mechanism of [Fe-2(CO)(4)(kappa(2)-Ph2PCH2CH2PPh2)(mu-S(CH2)(3)S)] and related models of the [FeFe]-hydrogenases active site: a DFT investigation

Greco, C;Fantucci, P;De Gioia, L
;
Suarez-Bertoa, R;Bruschi, M;
2010

Abstract

A DFT study of protonation thermodynamics in H-2-evolving biomimetic catalysts related to [FeFe]-hydrogenases active site is presented here. Taking as a reference system the electrocatalytic dihydrogen evolution mechanism recently proposed for the synthetic assembly [Fe-2(CO)(4)(kappa(2)-Ph2PCH2CH2PPh2)(mu-S(CH2)(3)S)] (a, which is able to release H-2 after having undergone monoelectron reduction steps and three sequential protonation reactions), we show how the reduction of model complexes to oxidation states lower than those observed in [FeFe]-hydrogenases cofactor leads to a protonation regiochemistry that has no counterpart in the enzymatic mechanism of H-2 production. In particular, double protonation of the metal centers turned out to be disfavored in a by up to 12.5 kcal mol(-1) with respect to alternative protonation paths; as for the regiochemistry of triple protonation, the formation of eta(2)-H-2 adducts is disfavored by at least similar to 25 kcal mol(-1). Structural analysis of the theoretical models also revealed that over-reduction of synthetic complexes, though necessary for observing H-2 evolution from the currently available biomimetic electrocatalysts, can generally impair their structural integrity. Possible approaches for the modulation of protonation regiochemistry are then proposed; in particular, it turned out that a targeted use of sigma-donating ligands showing low basicity can favor double protonation of iron centers
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Density-Functional Theory; Approximate Coulomb Potentials; Iron-Iron Hydrogenase; Fe-Only Hydrogenases; Auxiliary Basis-Sets; De-Novo Design; Proton Reduction; Redox Potentials; Desulfovibrio-Desulfuricans; Crystal-Structure
English
2010
39
31
7320
7329
none
Greco, C., Fantucci, P., De Gioia, L., Suarez-Bertoa, R., Bruschi, M., Talarmin, J., et al. (2010). Electrocatalytic dihydrogen evolution mechanism of [Fe-2(CO)(4)(kappa(2)-Ph2PCH2CH2PPh2)(mu-S(CH2)(3)S)] and related models of the [FeFe]-hydrogenases active site: a DFT investigation. DALTON TRANSACTIONS, 39(31), 7320-7329 [10.1039/b926040d].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/32111
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