Reversible Ligand-Centered Reduction in Low-Coordinate Iron Formazanate Complexes

Chemistry. 2018 Jul 2;24(37):9417-9425. doi: 10.1002/chem.201801298. Epub 2018 Jun 7.

Abstract

Coordination of redox-active ligands to metals is a compelling strategy for making reduced complexes more accessible. In this work, we explore the use of redox-active formazanate ligands in low-coordinate iron chemistry. Reduction of an iron(II) precursor occurs at milder potentials than analogous non-redox-active β-diketiminate complexes, and the reduced three-coordinate formazanate-iron compound is characterized in detail. Structural, spectroscopic, and computational analysis show that the formazanate ligand undergoes reversible ligand-centered reduction to form a formazanate radical dianion in the reduced species. The less negative reduction potential of the reduced low-coordinate iron formazanate complex leads to distinctive reactivity with formation of a new N-I bond that is not seen with the β-diketiminate analogue. Thus, the storage of an electron on the supporting ligand changes the redox potential and enhances certain reactivity.

Keywords: formazanate; iron; ligand-centered-radical; low-coordinate; redox-active ligand.