Vlad Martin-Diaconescu
University of Girona
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Featured researches published by Vlad Martin-Diaconescu.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015
Teresa Corona; Florian Felix Pfaff; Ferran Acuña-Parés; Apparao Draksharapu; Christopher J. Whiteoak; Vlad Martin-Diaconescu; Julio Lloret-Fillol; Wesley R. Browne; Kallol Ray
Herein, we report the formation of a highly reactive nickel-oxygen species that has been trapped following reaction of a Ni(II) precursor bearing a macrocyclic bis(amidate) ligand with meta-chloroperbenzoic acid (HmCPBA). This compound is only detectable at temperatures below 250 K and is much more reactive toward organic substrates (i.e., C-H bonds, C=C bonds, and sulfides) than previously reported well-defined nickel-oxygen species. Remarkably, this species is formed by heterolytic O-O bond cleavage of a Ni-HmCPBA precursor, which is concluded from experimental and computational data. On the basis of spectroscopy and DFT calculations, this reactive species is proposed to be a Ni(III) -oxyl compound.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Lina K. Blusch; Kathryn E. Craigo; Vlad Martin-Diaconescu; Ashley B. McQuarters; Eckhard Bill; Sebastian Dechert; Serena DeBeer; Nicolai Lehnert; Franc Meyer
The Siamese-twin porphyrin (2H4) is a unique pyrazole-expanded porphyrin providing two adjacent cavities each offering an {N4} binding motif. It was previously found to form stable dicopper(II) or dinickel(II) complexes where both metal ions are nested in a porphyrin-like environment. This work addresses the rich redox chemistry of the dicopper complex 2Cu2 that originates from the redox synergy of two proximate metal ions in combination with the potentially non-innocent expanded porphyrin ligand. Complementing previous X-ray crystallographic and SQUID data for solid material, the electronic structure of parent 2Cu2 in solution was now investigated by MCD and EPR spectroscopy. This allowed the assignment of UV-vis absorptions and confirmed the drastic twist of the molecule with ferromagnetically coupled copper(II) ions. 2Cu2 was found to exhibit multiple redox events in the potential range from -2.4 to +1.7 V versus Fc/Fc(+), and singly oxidized [2Cu2](+) as well as doubly oxidized [2Cu2](2+) were characterized in detail by various analytical and spectroscopic methods. [2Cu2](+) was found by EPR spectroscopy and DFT calculations to have an S = 1/2 ground state, while [2Cu2](2+) is diamagnetic. Single crystal X-ray crystallography of [2Cu2(acetone)2](BF4)2 revealed that the 2Cu2 core is structurally invariant upon two-fold oxidation, while XAS measurements at the Cu K-edge for 2Cu2 and [2Cu2(acetone)2](BF4)2 showed that the copper ions remain in the +2 oxidation state throughout. The combined experimental and computational evidence identified the Siamese-twin porphyrin as a multi-electron redox-active ligand with hidden non-innocence. Each ligand subunit upon oxidation forms a ligand-centered radical, though the spin vanishes because of covalency and strong antiferromagnetic coupling between the ligand radical and the proximate metal ion. Complexes of the Siamese-twin porphyrin may thus serve as a valuable bioinspired platform that combines both metal-ligand and two-metal-ion cooperativities for use in multi-electron processes.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Michael K. Coggins; Vlad Martin-Diaconescu; Serena DeBeer; Julie A. Kovacs
Manganese-peroxos are proposed as key intermediates in a number of important biochemical and synthetic transformations. Our understanding of the structural, spectroscopic, and reactivity properties of these metastable species is limited, however, and correlations between these properties have yet to be established experimentally. Herein we report the crystallographic structures of a series of structurally related metastable Mn(III)-OOR compounds, and examine their spectroscopic and reactivity properties. The four reported Mn(III)-OOR compounds extend the number of known end-on Mn(III)-(η(1)-peroxos) to six. The ligand backbone is shown to alter the metal-ligand distances and modulate the electronic properties key to bonding and activation of the peroxo. The mechanism of thermal decay of these metastable species is examined via variable-temperature kinetics. Strong correlations between structural (O-O and Mn···N(py,quin) distances), spectroscopic (E(πv*(O-O) → Mn CT band), ν(O-O)), and kinetic (ΔH(‡) and ΔS(‡)) parameters for these complexes provide compelling evidence for rate-limiting O-O bond cleavage. Products identified in the final reaction mixtures of Mn(III)-OOR decay are consistent with homolytic O-O bond scission. The N-heterocyclic amines and ligand backbone (Et vs Pr) are found to modulate structural and reactivity properties, and O-O bond activation is shown, both experimentally and theoretically, to track with metal ion Lewis acidity. The peroxo O-O bond is shown to gradually become more activated as the N-heterocyclic amines move closer to the metal ion causing a decrease in π-donation from the peroxo πv*(O-O) orbital. The reported work represents one of very few examples of experimentally verified relationships between structure and function.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2015
Julian A. Rees; Vlad Martin-Diaconescu; Julie A. Kovacs; Serena DeBeer
Manganese K-edge X-ray absorption (XAS) and Kβ emission (XES) spectroscopies were used to investigate the factors contributing to O-O bond activation in a small-molecule system. The recent structural characterization of a metastable peroxo-bridged dimeric Mn(III)2 complex derived from dioxygen has provided the first opportunity to obtain X-ray spectroscopic data on this type of species. Ground state and time-dependent density functional theory calculations have provided further insight into the nature of the transitions in XAS pre-edge and valence-to-core (VtC) XES spectral regions. An experimentally validated electronic structure description has also enabled the determination of structural and electronic factors that govern peroxo bond activation, and have allowed us to propose both a rationale for the metastability of this unique compound, as well as potential future ligand designs which may further promote or inhibit O-O bond scission. Finally, we have explored the potential of VtC XES as an element-selective probe of both the coordination mode and degree of activation of peroxomanganese adducts. The comparison of these results to a recent VtC XES study of iron-mediated dintrogen activation helps to illustrate the factors that may determine the success of this spectroscopic method for future studies of small-molecule activation at transition metal sites.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2015
Vlad Martin-Diaconescu; Marcello Gennari; Bertrand Gerey; Emily Y. Tsui; Jacob S. Kanady; Rosalie Tran; Jacques Pécaut; Dimitrios Maganas; Vera Krewald; Eric Gouré; Carole Duboc; Junko Yano; Theodor Agapie; Marie-Noëlle Collomb; Serena DeBeer
Herein, Ca K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) is developed as a means to characterize the local environment of calcium centers. The spectra for six, seven, and eight coordinate inorganic and molecular calcium complexes were analyzed and determined to be primarily influenced by the coordination environment and site symmetry at the calcium center. The experimental results are closely correlated to time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) calculations of the XAS spectra. The applicability of this methodology to complex systems was investigated using structural mimics of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) of PSII. It was found that Ca K-edge XAS is a sensitive probe for structural changes occurring in the cubane heterometallic cluster due to Mn oxidation. Future applications to the OEC are discussed.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2014
Lina K. Blusch; Oliver Mitevski; Vlad Martin-Diaconescu; Kevin Pröpper; Serena DeBeer; Sebastian Dechert; Franc Meyer
The Siamese-twin porphyrin (1H4) is a redox noninnocent pyrazole-expanded porphyrin with two equivalent dibasic {N4} binding sites. It is now shown that its selective monometalation can be achieved to give the nickel(II) complex 1H2Ni with the second {N4} site devoid of a metal ion. This intermediate is then cleanly converted to 1Ni2 and to the first heterobimetallic Siamese-twin porphyrin 1CuNi. Structural characterization of 1H2Ni shows that it has the same helical structure previously seen for 1Cu2, 1Ni2, and free base 1H6(2+). Titration experiments suggest that the metal-devoid pocket of 1H2Ni can accommodate two additional protons, giving [1H4Ni](2+). Both bimetallic complexes 1Ni2 and 1CuNi feature rich redox chemistry, similar to the recently reported 1Cu2, including two chemically reversible oxidations at moderate potentials between -0.3 and +0.5 V (vs Cp2Fe/Cp2Fe(+)). The locus of these oxidations, in singly oxidized [1Ni2](+) and [1CuNi](+) as well as twice oxidized [1CuNi](2+), has been experimentally derived from comparison of the electrochemical properties of the complete series of complexes 1Cu2, 1Ni2, and 1CuNi, and from electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy and X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) (Ni and Cu K edges). All redox events are largely ligand-based, and in heterobimetallic 1CuNi, the first oxidation takes place within its Cu-subunit, while the second oxidation then occurs in its Ni-subunit. Adding pyridine to solutions of [1Ni2](+) and [1CuNi](2+) cleanly converts them to metal-oxidized redox isomers with axial EPR spectra typical for Ni(III) having significant dz(2)(1) character, reflecting close similarity with nickel complexes of common porphyrins. The possibility of selectively synthesizing heterobimetallic complexes 1MNi from a symmetric binucleating ligand scaffold, with the unusual situation of three distinct contiguous redox sites (M, Ni, and the porphyrin-like ligand), further expands the Siamese-twin porphyrins potential to serve as an adjustable platform for multielectron redox processes in chemical catalysis and in electronic applications.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Gerard Sabenya; Laura Lázaro; Ilaria Gamba; Vlad Martin-Diaconescu; Erik Andris; Thomas Weyhermüller; Frank Neese; Jana Roithová; Eckhard Bill; Julio Lloret-Fillol
Iron complex [FeIII(N3)(MePy2tacn)](PF6)2 (1), containing a neutral triazacyclononane-based pentadentate ligand, and a terminally bound azide ligand has been prepared and spectroscopically and structurally characterized. Structural details, magnetic susceptibility data, and Mössbauer spectra demonstrate that 1 has a low-spin (S = 1/2) ferric center. X-ray diffraction analysis of 1 reveals remarkably short Fe-N (1.859 Å) and long FeN-N2 (1.246 Å) distances, while the FT-IR spectra show an unusually low N-N stretching frequency (2019 cm-1), suggesting that the FeN-N2 bond is particularly weak. Photolysis of 1 at 470 or 530 nm caused N2 elimination and generation of a nitrido species that on the basis of Mössbauer, magnetic susceptibility, EPR, and X-ray absorption in conjunction with density functional theory computational analyses is formulated as [FeV(N)(MePy2tacn)]2+ (2). Results indicate that 2 is a low-spin (S = 1/2) iron(V) species, which exhibits a short Fe-N distance (1.64 Å), as deduced from extended X-ray absorption fine structure analysis. Compound 2 is only stable at cryogenic (liquid N2) temperatures, and frozen solutions as well as solid samples decompose rapidly upon warming, producing N2. However, the high-valent compound could be generated in the gas phase, and its reactivity against olefins, sulfides, and substrates with weak C-H bonds studied. Compound 2 proved to be a powerful two-electron oxidant that can add the nitrido ligand to olefin and sulfide sites as well as oxidize cyclohexadiene substrates to benzene in a formal H2-transfer process. In summary, compound 2 constitutes the first case of an octahedral FeV(N) species prepared within a neutral ligand framework and adds to the few examples of FeV species that could be spectroscopically and chemically characterized.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Oriol Planas; Steven Roldán-Gómez; Vlad Martin-Diaconescu; Teodor Parella; Josep M. Luis; Xavi Ribas
Herein we describe the synthesis of a family of aryl-Co(III)-carboxylate complexes and their reactivity with ethyl diazoacetate. Crystallographic, full spectroscopic characterization, and theoretical evidence of unique C-metalated aryl-Co(III) enolate intermediates is provided, unraveling a carboxylate-assisted formation of aryl-Co(III) masked-carbenes. Moreover, additional evidence for an unprecedented Co(III)-mediated intramolecular SN2-type C-C bond formation in which the carboxylate moiety acts as a relay is disclosed. This novel strategy is key to tame the hot reactivity of a metastable Co(III)-carbene and elicit C-C coupling products in a productive manner.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2016
Vlad Martin-Diaconescu; Kelly N. Chacón; Mario Ulises Delgado-Jaime; Dimosthenis Sokaras; Tsu Chien Weng; Serena DeBeer; Ninian J. Blackburn
Biological systems use copper as a redox center in many metalloproteins, where the role of the metal is to cycle between its +1 and +2 oxidation states. This chemistry requires the redox potential to be in a range that can stabilize both Cu(I) and Cu(II) states and often involves protein-derived ligand sets involving mixed histidine-methionine coordination that balance the preferences of both oxidation states. Transport proteins, on the other hand, utilize copper in the Cu(I) state and often contain sites comprised predominately of the cuprophilic residue methionine. The electronic factors that allow enzymes and transporters to balance their redox requirements are complex and are often elusive due to the dearth of spectroscopic probes of the Cu(I) state. Here we present the novel application of X-ray emission spectroscopy to copper proteins via a study of a series of mixed His-Met copper sites where the ligand set varies in a systematic way between the His3 and Met3 limits. The sites are derived from the wild-type peptidylglycine monooxygenase (PHM), two single-site variants which replicate each of its two copper sites (CuM-site and CuH-site), and the transporters CusF and CusB. Clear differences are observed in the Kβ2,5 region at the Met3 and His3 limits. CusB (Met3) has a distinct peak at 8978.4 eV with a broad shoulder at 8975.6 eV, whereas CuH (His3) has two well-resolved features: a more intense feature at 8974.8 eV and a second at 8977.2 eV. The mixed coordination sphere CusF (Met2His) and the PHM CuM variant (Met1His2) have very similar spectra consisting of two features at 8975.2 and 8977.8 eV. An analysis of DFT calculated spectra indicate that the intensity of the higher energy peak near 8978 eV is mediated by mixing of ligand-based orbitals into the Cu d(10) manifold, with S from Met providing more intensity by facilitating increased Cu p-d mixing. Furthermore, reaction of WT PHM with CO (an oxygen analogue) produced the M site CO complex, which showed a unique XES spectrum that could be computationally reproduced by including interactions between Cu(I) and the CO ligand. The study suggests that the valence-to-core (VtC) region can not only serve as a probe of ligand speciation but also offer insight into the coordination geometry, in a fashion similar to XAS pre-edges, and may be sufficiently sensitive to the coordination of exogenous ligands to be useful in the study of reaction mechanisms.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018
Ruixi Fan; Joan Serrano-Plana; Williamson N. Oloo; Apparao Draksharapu; Estefanía Delgado-Pinar; Vlad Martin-Diaconescu; Margarida Borrell; Julio Lloret-Fillol; Enrique García-España; Yisong Guo; Emile L. Bominaar; Lawrence Que; Eckard Münck
The reaction of [(PyNMe3)FeII(CF3SO3)2], 1, with excess peracetic acid at -40 °C generates a highly reactive intermediate, 2b(PAA), that has the fastest rate to date for oxidizing cyclohexane by a nonheme iron species. It exhibits an intense 490 nm chromophore associated with an S = 1/2 EPR signal having g-values at 2.07, 2.01, and 1.94. This species was shown to be in a fast equilibrium with a second S = 1/2 species, 2a(PAA), assigned to a low-spin acylperoxoiron(III) center. Unfortunately, contaminants accompanying the 2(PAA) samples prevented determination of the iron oxidation state by Mössbauer spectroscopy. Use of MeO-PyNMe3 (an electron-enriched version of PyNMe3) and cyclohexyl peroxycarboxylic acid as oxidant affords intermediate 3b(CPCA) with a Mössbauer isomer shift δ = -0.08 mm/s that indicates an iron(V) oxidation state. Analysis of the Mössbauer and EPR spectra, combined with DFT studies, demonstrates that the electronic ground state of 3b(CPCA) is best described as a quantum mechanical mixture of [(MeO-PyNMe3)FeV(O)(OC(O)R)]2+ (∼75%) with some FeIV(O)(•OC(O)R) and FeIII(OOC(O)R) character. DFT studies of 3b(CPCA) reveal that the unbound oxygen of the carboxylate ligand, O2, is only 2.04 Å away from the oxo group, O1, corresponding to a Wiberg bond order for the O1-O2 bond of 0.35. This unusual geometry facilitates reversible O1-O2 bond formation and cleavage and accounts for the high reactivity of the intermediate when compared to the rates of hydrogen atom transfer and oxygen atom transfer reactions of FeIII(OC(O)R) ferric acyl peroxides and FeIV(O) complexes. The interaction of O2 with O1 leads to a significant downshift of the Fe-O1 Raman frequency (815 cm-1) relative to the 903 cm-1 value predicted for the hypothetical [(MeO-PyNMe3)FeV(O)(NCMe)]3+ complex.