Abstract

A powerful means of enhancing our understanding of the structures and functions of enzymes that contain nickel-sulfur bonds, such as Ni superoxide dismutase, acetyl-coenzyme A synthase/carbon monoxide dehydrogenase, [NiFe] hydrogenase, and methyl-CoM reductase, involves the investigation of model compounds with similar structural and/or electronic properties. In this study, we have characterized a trans-mu-1,2-disulfido-bridged dinickel(II) species, [{(tmc)Ni}(2)(S(2))](2+) (1, tmc = 1,4,8,11-tetramethyl-1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradecane) by using electronic absorption, magnetic circular dichroism (MCD), and resonance Raman (rR) spectroscopic techniques, as well as density functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent DFT computational methods. Our computational results, validated on the basis of the experimental MCD data and previously reported (1)H NMR spectra, reveal that 1 is best described as containing two antiferromagnetically coupled high-spin Ni(II) centers. A normal coordinate analysis of the rR vibrational data was performed to quantify the core bond strengths, yielding force constants of k(Ni-S) = 2.69 mdyn/A and k(S-S) = 2.40 mdyn/A. These values provide a useful basis for a comparison of metal-S/O bonding in 1 and related Ni(2)(O(2)), Cu(2)(O(2)), and Cu(2)(S(2)) dimers. In both the disulfido and the peroxo species, the lower effective nuclear charge of Ni(II) as compared to Cu(II) results in a decreased covalency, and thus relatively weaker metal-S/O bonding interactions in the Ni(2) dimers than in the Cu(2) complexes.

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