Redox non-innocent ligands hold the potential to expand the redox chemistry and activity of transition metal catalysts. The impact of the additional redox chemistry of phenol ligands in oxidation catalysis is explored here in the complex μ-oxido-diiron(III) polypyridyl (1) [(L)Fe(III)(μ–O)Fe(III)(L)](ClO4)2 (where HL is 2-(((di(pyridin-2-yl)methyl) (pyridin-2-ylmethyl) amino)methyl)phenol) and its tert-butyl substituted analog 2, in which each of the Fe(III) centers is coordinated to a phenolato moiety of the ligand. Complex 1 was shown earlier to catalyse the oxidation of benzyl alcohols to aldehydes with H2O2. In particular acid was found to accelerate the reactions by removal of a lag period before catalysis initiated. Here, we use reaction monitoring with resonance Raman, UV/vis absorption and EPR spectroscopy to show that under catalytic conditions, i.e. with excess H2O2, rapid (< 5 s) loss of the phenolato moiety occurs, resulting in the formation of an N4 ligated Fe(III) complex. This N4 coordinated complex forms a Fe(III)-OOH species, which is responsible for alcohol oxidation and over time a relatively stable oxido-bridged dinuclear Fe(III) complex forms as a resting state in the catalytic system. The main role of acid in the catalysis is shown to be to facilitate the initial coordination of H2O2 by driving the formation of mononuclear complexes from 1 and 2. The data show that although the phenolato moiety imparts interesting redox properties on complex 1, it does not contribute directly to the oxidation catalysis observed with H2O2.
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