A dinickel(II)porphyrin dimer has been used here in which the redox-active pyrrole-moiety, similar to the tryptophan residue in diheme enzymes such as MauG and bCcP, has been placed between two Ni(II)porphyrin centers connected a flexible, but unconjugated methylene bridge. This arrangement provides a large physical separation between the two metal centers and thus displays almost no communication between them through the bridge. Upon treatment with DDQ as an oxidant, the dinickel(II) porphyrin dimer slowly gets converted into an indolizinium-fused chlorin-porphyrin heterodimer. However, oxidations of the dinickel(II) porphyrin dimer up to two oxidizing equivalents using oxidants such as AgSbF and FeCl resulted in the formation of a dication diradical complex. Interestingly, in order to stabilize such a highly oxidized dication diradical, two non-conjugated methylene spacers undergo facile 2e/-2H oxidation to make the bridge fully π-conjugated for promoting through-bond communication. Through the oxidized and conjugated bridge, two porphyrin π-cation radicals display considerable communications leading to an efficient intramolecular spin coupling to form a singlet state. Interestingly, the redox-active nature of the bridge controls the electronic communication just by simple oxidation or reduction, and thereby, acts as a molecular switch for efficient magnetic relay.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2dt03283j | DOI Listing |
Dalton Trans
January 2023
Department of Chemistry, Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, Kanpur-208016, India.
A dinickel(II)porphyrin dimer has been used here in which the redox-active pyrrole-moiety, similar to the tryptophan residue in diheme enzymes such as MauG and bCcP, has been placed between two Ni(II)porphyrin centers connected a flexible, but unconjugated methylene bridge. This arrangement provides a large physical separation between the two metal centers and thus displays almost no communication between them through the bridge. Upon treatment with DDQ as an oxidant, the dinickel(II) porphyrin dimer slowly gets converted into an indolizinium-fused chlorin-porphyrin heterodimer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInorg Chem
April 2022
Department of Chemistry, Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, Kanpur 208016, India.
Dinickel(II) and dicopper(II) porphyrin dimers have been constructed in which two metalloporphyrin units are widely separated by a long unconjugated dipyrrole bridge. Two macrocycles are aligned somewhat orthogonally to each other, while oxidation of the bridge generates a fully π-conjugated butterfly-like structure, which, in turn, upon stepwise oxidations by stronger oxidants result in the formation of the corresponding one- and two-electron-oxidized species exhibiting unusual long-range charge/radical delocalization to produce intense absorptions in the near-infrared (NIR) region and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signals of a triplet state due to interaction between the unpaired spins on the Cu(II) ions. Although the two metal centers have a large physical separation through the bridge (more than 16 Å), they share electrons efficiently between them, behaving as a single unit rather than two independent centers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
September 2013
Institut für Anorganische Chemie, Georg-August-Universität, Tammannstr. 4, 37077 Göttingen, Germany.
The Siamese-twin porphyrin (2H4) is a unique pyrazole-expanded porphyrin providing two adjacent cavities each offering an {N4} binding motif. It was previously found to form stable dicopper(II) or dinickel(II) complexes where both metal ions are nested in a porphyrin-like environment. This work addresses the rich redox chemistry of the dicopper complex 2Cu2 that originates from the redox synergy of two proximate metal ions in combination with the potentially non-innocent expanded porphyrin ligand.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Asian J
November 2013
School of Chemistry, Physics and Mechanical Engineering, Queensland University of Technology, G.P.O. Box 2434, Brisbane 4001 (Australia), Fax: (+61) 7-3138-2482.
A meso-bromidoplatiniobis(triphenylphosphine) η(1)-organometallic porphyrin monomer was prepared by the oxidative addition of meso-bromoZnDPP (DPP=dianion of 5,15-diphenylporphyrin) to a platinum(0) species. The meso-meso directly linked dimeric porphyrin (5) was prepared from this monomer by silver(I)-promoted oxidative coupling and planarized to give a triply linked dizinc(II) porphyrin dimer (8). Acidic demetallation of 8 afforded the bis(free base) 9.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInorg Chem
June 2002
Department of Chemistry, 6-335, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA.
A comparison of the structure, spectroscopy, and oxygen atom-transfer reactivity of cofacial bisporphyrins anchored by xanthene (DPX) and dibenzofuran (DPD) pillars is presented. The synthesis and characterization of dicopper(II) and dinickel(II) complexes of DPD completes a homologous series of homobimetallic zinc(II), copper(II), and nickel(II) complexes for both cofacial platforms. X-ray crystallographic analysis of the parent free-base porphyrins H(4)DPX (1) and H(4)DPD (5) confirms the face-to-face arrangement of the two porphyrin macrocycles with a large available range of vertical pocket sizes: 1 (C(80)H(92)Cl(2)N(8)O), triclinic, space group P1 macro, a = 13.
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