Abstract
In this article, we present a meticulous computational study to foresee the effect of an oxygen-rich macrocycle on the reactivity for C-H activation. For this study, a widely studied nonheme Fe(IV)O molecule with a TMC (1,4,8,11-tetramethyl 1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradecane) macrocycle that is equatorially attached to four nitrogen atoms (designated as N4) and acetonitrile as an axial ligand has been taken into account. For the goal of hetero-substitution, step-by-step replacement of the N4 framework with O atoms, i.e., N4, N3O1, N2O2, N1O3, and O4 systems, has been considered, and dihydroanthracene (DHA) has been used as the substrate. In order to neutralise the system and prevent the self-interaction error in DFT, triflate counterions have also been included in the calculations. The study of the energetics of these C-H bond activation reactions and the potential energy surfaces mapped therefore reveal that the initial hydrogen abstraction, which is the rate-determining step, follows the two-state reactivity (TSR) pattern, which means that the originally excited quintet state falls lower in the transition state and the product. The reaction follows the hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) mechanism, as indicated by the spin density studies. The results revealed a fascinating reactivity order, in which the reactivity increases with the enrichment of the oxygen atom in the equatorial position, namely the order follows N4 < N3O1 < N2O2 < N1O3 < O4. The impacts of oxygen substitution on quantum mechanical tunneling and the H/D kinetic isotope effect have also been investigated. When analysing the causes of this reactivity pattern, a number of variables have been identified, including the reactant-like transition structure, spin density distribution, distortion energy, and energies of the electron acceptor orbital, i.e., the energy of the LUMO (σ*z2), which validate the obtained outcome. Our results also show very good agreement with earlier combined experimental and theoretical studies considering TMC and TMCO-type complexes. The DFT predictions reported here will undoubtedly encourage experimental research in this biomimetic field, as they provide an alternative with higher reactivity in which heteroatoms can be substituted for the traditional nitrogen atom.
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