Abstract
Quasi-classical molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were carried out to study the mechanism of iron porphyrin-catalyzed hydroxylation of ethylbenzene. The hydrogen atom abstraction from ethylbenzene by iron-oxo species is the rate-determining step, which generates the radical pair of iron-hydroxo species and the benzylic radical. In the subsequent radical rebound step, the iron-hydroxo species and benzylic radical recombine to form the hydroxylated product, which is barrierless on the doublet energy surface. In the gas-phase quasi-classical MD study on the doublet energy surface, 45% of the reactive trajectories lead directly to the hydroxylated product, and this increases to 56% in implicit solvent model simulations. The percentage of reactive trajectories leading to the separated radical pair is 98-100% on high-spin (quartet/sextet) energy surfaces. The low-spin state reactivity dominates in the hydroxylation of ethylbenzene, which is dynamically both concerted and stepwise, since the time gap between C-H bond cleavage and C-O bond formation ranges from 41 to 619 fs. By contrast, the high-spin state catalysis is an energetically stepwise process, which has a negligible contribution to the formation of hydroxylation products.
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