The redox equilibrium between dinuclear Cu(II) μ-thiolate and Cu(I) disulfide structures has been analyzed experimentally and via DFT calculations. Two new ligands, L(2)SSL(2) and L(4)SSL(4), and their Cu(II) μ-thiolate and Cu(I) disulfide complexes were synthesized. For L(2)SSL(2), these two redox-isomeric copper species are shown to be in equilibrium, which depends on both temperature and solvent. For L(4)SSL(4) the μ-thiolate species forms as the kinetic product and further evolves into the disulfide complex under thermodynamic control, which creates the unprecedented possibility to compare both species under the same reaction conditions. The energies of the μ-thiolate and disulfide complexes for two series of related ligands have been calculated with DFT; the results rationalize the experimentally observed structures, and emphasize the important role that steric requirements play in the formation of the Cu(II) thiolate structure.
The proton-induced electron-transfer reaction of a Cu(II) μ-thiolate complex to a Cu(I) -containing species has been investigated, both experimentally and computationally. The Cu(II) μ-thiolate complex [Cu(II) 2 (L(Me) S)2 ](2+) is isolated with the new pyridyl-containing ligand L(Me) SSL(Me) , which can form both Cu(II) thiolate and Cu(I) disulfide complexes, depending on the solvent. Both the Cu(II) and the Cu(I) complexes show reactivity upon addition of protons. The multivalent tetranuclear complex [Cu(I) 2 Cu(II) 2 (LS)2 (CH3 CN)6 ](4+) crystallizes after addition of two equivalents of strong acid to a solution containing the μ-thiolate complex [Cu(II) 2 (LS)2 ](2+) and is further analyzed in solution. This study shows that, upon addition of protons to the Cu(II) thiolate compound, the ligand dissociates from the copper centers, in contrast to an earlier report describing redox isomerization to a Cu(I) disulfide species that is protonated at the pyridyl moieties. Computational studies of the protonated Cu(II) μ-thiolate and Cu(I) disulfide species with LSSL show that already upon addition of two equivalents of protons, ligand dissociation forming [Cu(I) (CH3 CN)4 ](+) and protonated ligand is energetically favored over conversion to a protonated Cu(I) disulfide complex.
Protonation of a CuII μ‐thiolate complex induces an internal redox reaction by which a CuI disulfide compound is formed. The dinuclear CuII μ‐thiolate species forms a model for the CuA site, which has been shown to be sensitive to pH changes. In their Full Paper on C. Fonseca Guerra, E. Bouwman et al. show, both experimentally and computationally, that, after addition of just one equivalent of acid per copper center, not only does this redox reaction occur, but ligand dissociation takes place as well. The results imply that pH can have a tremendous effect on the coordination environment of the metal center.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.