Mössbauer study of the three-coordinate planar Fe(II) thiolate complex [Fe(SR)(3)](-) (R = C(6)H(2)-2,4,6-tBu(3)): model for the trigonal iron sites of the MoFe(7)S(9):homocitrate cofactor of nitrogenase

Inorg Chem. 2002 May 20;41(10):2690-6. doi: 10.1021/ic0111278.

Abstract

The cofactor (M-center) of the MoFe protein of nitrogenase, a MoFe(7)S(9):homocitrate cluster, contains six Fe sites with a (distorted) trigonal sulfido coordination. These sites exhibit unusually small quadrupole splittings, Delta E(Q) approximately 0.7 mm/s, and isomer shifts, delta approximately 0.41 mm/s. Mössbauer and ENDOR studies have provided the magnetic hyperfine tensors of all iron sites in the S = 3/2 state M(N). To assess the intrinsic zero-field splittings and hyperfine parameters of the cofactor sites, we have studied with Mössbauer spectroscopy two salts of the three-coordinated Fe(II) thiolate complex [Fe(SR)(3)](-) (R = C(6)H(2)-2,4,6-tBu(3)). One of the salts, [Ph(4)P][Fe(SR)(3)] x 2MeCN x C(7)H(8), 1, has a planar geometry with idealized C(3h) symmetry. This S = 2 complex has an axial zero-field splitting with D = +10.2 cm(-1). The magnetic hyperfine tensor components A(x) = A(y) = -7.5 MHz and A(z) = -29.5 MHz reflect an orbital ground state with d(z(2)) symmetry. A(iso) = (A(x) +A(y) +A(z))/3 = -14.9 MHz, which includes the contact interaction (kappa P = -21.9 MHz) and an orbital contribution (+7 MHz), which is substantially smaller than A(iso) approximately -22 MHz of the tetrahedral Fe(II)(S-R)(4) sites of both rubredoxin and [PPh(4)](2)[Fe(II)(SPh)(4)]. The largest component of the electric field gradient (EFG) tensor is negative, as expected for a d(z(2)) orbital. However, Delta E(Q) = -0.83 mm/s, which is smaller than expected for a high-spin ferrous site. This reduction can be attributed to a ligand contribution, which in planar complexes provides a large positive EFG component perpendicular to the ligand plane. The isomer shift of 1, delta = 0.56 mm/s, approaches the delta-values reported for the six trigonal cofactor sites. The parameters of 1 and their importance for the cofactor cluster of nitrogenase are discussed.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Iron / chemistry*
  • Models, Chemical
  • Molecular Conformation
  • Molybdenum / chemistry*
  • Nitrogenase / chemistry*
  • Organometallic Compounds / chemistry*
  • Spectroscopy, Mossbauer
  • Sulfur Compounds / chemistry*

Substances

  • Organometallic Compounds
  • Sulfur Compounds
  • Molybdenum
  • Iron
  • Nitrogenase