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Dive into the research topics where Niklas B. Thompson is active.

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Featured researches published by Niklas B. Thompson.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

A Synthetic Single-Site Fe Nitrogenase: High Turnover, Freeze-Quench 57Fe Mössbauer Data, and a Hydride Resting State

Trevor J. Del Castillo; Niklas B. Thompson; Jonas C. Peters

The mechanisms of the few known molecular nitrogen-fixing systems, including nitrogenase enzymes, are of much interest but are not fully understood. We recently reported that Fe-N2 complexes of tetradentate P3(E) ligands (E = B, C) generate catalytic yields of NH3 under an atmosphere of N2 with acid and reductant at low temperatures. Here we show that these Fe catalysts are unexpectedly robust and retain activity after multiple reloadings. Nearly an order of magnitude improvement in yield of NH3 for each Fe catalyst has been realized (up to 64 equiv of NH3 produced per Fe for P3(B) and up to 47 equiv for P3(C)) by increasing acid/reductant loading with highly purified acid. Cyclic voltammetry shows the apparent onset of catalysis at the P3(B)Fe-N2/P3(B)Fe-N2(-) couple and controlled-potential electrolysis of P3(B)Fe(+) at -45 °C demonstrates that electrolytic N2 reduction to NH3 is feasible. Kinetic studies reveal first-order rate dependence on Fe catalyst concentration (P3(B)), consistent with a single-site catalyst model. An isostructural system (P3(Si)) is shown to be appreciably more selective for hydrogen evolution. In situ freeze-quench Mössbauer spectroscopy during turnover reveals an iron-borohydrido-hydride complex as a likely resting state of the P3(B)Fe catalyst system. We postulate that hydrogen-evolving reaction activity may prevent iron hydride formation from poisoning the P3(B)Fe system. This idea may be important to consider in the design of synthetic nitrogenases and may also have broader significance given that intermediate metal hydrides and hydrogen evolution may play a key role in biological nitrogen fixation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Intramolecular C–H and C–F Bond Oxygenation Mediated by a Putative Terminal Oxo Species in Tetranuclear Iron Complexes

Graham de Ruiter; Niklas B. Thompson; Michael K. Takase; Theodor Agapie

Herein we report the intramolecular arene C-H and C-F bond oxygenation by tetranuclear iron complexes. Treatment of [LFe3(PhPz)3OFe][OTf]2 (1) or its fluorinated analog [LFe3(F2ArPz)3OFe][OTf]2 (5) with iodosobenzene results in the regioselective hydroxylation of a bridging pyrazolate ligand, converting a C-H or C-F bond into a C-O bond. The observed reactivity suggests the formation of terminal and reactive Fe-oxo intermediates. With the possibility of intramolecular electron transfer within clusters in 1 and 5, different reaction pathways (Fe(IV)-oxo vs Fe(III)-oxo) might be responsible for the observed arene hydroxylation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Nitric oxide activation by distal redox modulation in tetranuclear iron nitrosyl complexes.

Graham de Ruiter; Niklas B. Thompson; Davide Lionetti; Theodor Agapie

A series of tetranuclear iron complexes displaying a site-differentiated metal center was synthesized. Three of the metal centers are coordinated to our previously reported ligand, based on a 1,3,5-triarylbenzene motif with nitrogen and oxygen donors. The fourth (apical) iron center is coordinatively unsaturated and appended to the trinuclear core through three bridging pyrazolates and an interstitial μ4-oxide moiety. Electrochemical studies of complex [LFe3(PhPz)3OFe][OTf]2 revealed three reversible redox events assigned to the Fe(II)4/Fe(II)3Fe(III) (-1.733 V), Fe(II)3Fe(III)/Fe(II)2Fe(III)2 (-0.727 V), and Fe(II)2Fe(III)2/Fe(II)Fe(III)3 (0.018 V) redox couples. Combined Mössbauer and crystallographic studies indicate that the change in oxidation state is exclusively localized at the triiron core, without changing the oxidation state of the apical metal center. This phenomenon is assigned to differences in the coordination environment of the two metal sites and provides a strategy for storing electron and hole equivalents without affecting the oxidation state of the coordinatively unsaturated metal. The presence of a ligand-binding site allowed the effect of redox modulation on nitric oxide activation by an Fe(II) metal center to be studied. Treatment of the clusters with nitric oxide resulted in binding of NO to the apical iron center, generating a {FeNO}(7) moiety. As with the NO-free precursors, the three reversible redox events are localized at the iron centers distal from the NO ligand. Altering the redox state of the triiron core resulted in significant change in the NO stretching frequency, by as much as 100 cm(-1). The increased activation of NO is attributed to structural changes within the clusters, in particular, those related to the interaction of the metal centers with the interstitial atom. The differences in NO activation were further shown to lead to differential reactivity, with NO disproportionation and N2O formation performed by the more electron-rich cluster.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Nitrogen Fixation via a Terminal Fe(IV) Nitride

Niklas B. Thompson; Michael T. Green; Jonas C. Peters

Terminal iron nitrides (Fe≡N) have been proposed as intermediates of (bio)catalytic nitrogen fixation, yet experimental evidence to support this hypothesis has been lacking. In particular, no prior synthetic examples of terminal Fe≡N species have been derived from N2. Here we show that a nitrogen-fixing Fe-N2 catalyst can be protonated to form a neutral Fe(NNH2) hydrazido(2-) intermediate, which, upon further protonation, heterolytically cleaves the N-N bond to release [FeIV≡N]+ and NH3. These observations provide direct evidence for the viability of a Chatt-type (distal) mechanism for Fe-mediated N2-to-NH3 conversion. The physical oxidation state range of the Fe complexes in this transformation is buffered by covalency with the ligand, a feature of possible relevance to catalyst design in synthetic and natural systems that facilitate multiproton/multielectron redox processes.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Accelerated Oxygen Atom Transfer and C-H Bond Oxygenation by Remote Redox Changes in Fe3Mn-Iodosobenzene Adducts

Graham De Ruiter; Kurtis M. Carsch; Sheraz Gul; Ruchira Chatterjee; Niklas B. Thompson; Michael K. Takase; Junko Yano; Theodor Agapie

We report the synthesis, characterization, and reactivity of [LFe3 (PhPz)3 OMn(s PhIO)][OTf]x (3: x=2; 4: x=3), where 4 is one of very few examples of iodosobenzene-metal adducts characterized by X-ray crystallography. Access to these rare heterometallic clusters enabled differentiation of the metal centers involved in oxygen atom transfer (Mn) or redox modulation (Fe). Specifically, 57 Fe Mössbauer and X-ray absorption spectroscopy provided unique insights into how changes in oxidation state (FeIII2 FeII MnII vs. FeIII3 MnII ) influence oxygen atom transfer in tetranuclear Fe3 Mn clusters. In particular, a one-electron redox change at a distal metal site leads to a change in oxygen atom transfer reactivity by ca. two orders of magnitude.


Joule | 2018

Trapping an Iron(VI) Water-Splitting Intermediate in Nonaqueous Media

Bryan M. Hunter; Niklas B. Thompson; Astrid M. Müller; George R. Rossman; Michael G. Hill; Jay R. Winkler; Harry B. Gray


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Design, Synthesis, and Self-Assembly of Polymers with Tailored Graft Distributions

Alice B. Chang; Tzu-Pin Lin; Niklas B. Thompson; Shao-Xiong Luo; Allegra L. Liberman-Martin; Hsiang-Yun Chen; Byeongdu Lee; Robert H. Grubbs


Archive | 2016

Nitrogen fixation with iron complexes

Jonas C. Peters; Trevor J. Del Castillo; Jonathan Rittle; Niklas B. Thompson


Archive | 2016

Towards terminal high-valent metal-oxo motifs on multimetallic scaffolds

Graham de Ruiter; Niklas B. Thompson; Theodor Agapie


Archive | 2015

Molecular Fe-mediated nitrogen fixation catalysis: Improving turnover and mechanistic insights

Jonas C. Peters; Sidney E. Creutz; Trevor J. Del Castillo; Jonathan Rittle; Niklas B. Thompson

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Theodor Agapie

California Institute of Technology

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Jonas C. Peters

California Institute of Technology

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Graham de Ruiter

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Jonathan Rittle

California Institute of Technology

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Alice B. Chang

California Institute of Technology

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Astrid M. Müller

California Institute of Technology

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Bryan M. Hunter

California Institute of Technology

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