Yong Li
Postdoctoral fellow
Atom and Group Transfer Reactions Involving High-valent Iron Complexes
Author
Summary, in English
To address the challenge of comprehending high-valent iron intermediates in biology, chemists have developed a number of bio-inspired functional models that exhibit a diverse range of catalytic properties. The main objective of this thesis is to examine the functional mimicry of mononuclear non-heme active sites in iron enzymes, specifically targeting FeIV=O, FeV(O)(OH) and FeIV=NR intermediates.
Chapter 1 provides an introduction to active sites of iron enzymes in biological systems and related bio-inspired models utilizing iron complexes. Chapter 2 relates to Papers I and IV. Paper I describes the syntheses and characterizations of four new FeIV=O complexes based on new ligands with minor steric restriction. The reactivity of these complexes in C-H activation and O-atom transfer reactions has been investigated in detail. As the ligands include negligible steric restrictions, the reactivity differences between these FeIV=O complexes are attributed to the electronic properties of the ligands. On the other hand, Paper IV provides an example of a ligand framework where the steric restrictions of the specific ligand dictate the substrate accessibility. Chapter 3 relates to Paper II and gives a comparative study on the structure and reactivity patterns of a new FeIV=NR complex versus its FeIV=O congener. Chapter 4 relates to Paper III and studies the epoxidation of alkenes by two mononuclear non-heme FeIV=O complexes based on ligands with different electron-donating properties. The catalysis and kinetics studies shed light on the influence of electron-donating properties on the reactivity and mechanism of alkene epoxidation.
This research provides insights into the influence exerted by ligand environments on the reactivities of FeIV=O, FeV(O)(OH) and FeIV=NR complexes. The study may contribute to the development of new, highly active catalysts for important oxidation reactions.
Department/s
- Chemical Physics
- LU Profile Area: Light and Materials
Publishing year
2023
Language
English
Full text
Document type
Dissertation
Publisher
Lund University
Topic
- Chemical Sciences
Keywords
- Iron enzymes
- high-valent iron intermediates
- bio-inspired iron complexes
- FeIV=O
- FeIV=NR
- catalytic reactions
- electronic effects
- steric restriction.
Status
Published
Supervisor
- Ebbe Nordlander
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISBN: 978-91-7422-952-3
- ISBN: 978-91-7422-953-0
Defence date
2 June 2023
Defence time
09:00
Defence place
Lecture Hall KC:A
Opponent
- Christine McKenzie (Professor)