6533b825fe1ef96bd128203e

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Exceptional affinity of nanostructured organic-inorganic hybrid materials towards dioxygen: confinement effect of copper complexes

Stéphane BrandèsGabriel DavidClément SuspèneRoger GuilardRobert J. P. Corriu

subject

Cations DivalentMetalationInorganic chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementLigands010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesCatalysischemistry.chemical_compoundAdsorptionHeterocyclic CompoundsCyclamPolymer chemistryOrganometallic CompoundsLamellar structureReactivity (chemistry)ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSdioxygen bindingBinding Sites010405 organic chemistryLigandsol-gel processesSpectrum AnalysisOrganic ChemistryTemperatureGeneral Chemistry[CHIM.MATE]Chemical Sciences/Material chemistrySilicon DioxideCopperEnzymesNanostructuresPeroxides0104 chemical sciencesOxygenchemistrytetraazamacrocyclesMultiprotein Complexescopper[ CHIM.MATE ] Chemical Sciences/Material chemistryAnisotropyAdsorptionHybrid materialGelsorganic-inorganic hybrid composites

description

We report the exceptional reactivity towards dioxygen of a nanostructured organic-inorganic hybrid material due to the confinement of copper cyclam within a silica matrix. The key step is the metalation reaction of the ligand, which can occur before or after xerogel formation through the sol-gel process. The incorporation of a Cu(II) center into the material after xerogel formation leads to a bridged Cu(I)/Cu(II) mixed-valence dinuclear species. This complex exhibits a very high affinity towards dioxygen, attributable to auto-organization of the active species in the solid. The remarkable properties of these copper complexes in the silica matrix demonstrate a high cooperative effect for O(2) adsorption; this is induced by close confinement of the two copper ions leading to end-on mu-eta(1):eta(1)-peroxodicopper(II) complexes. The anisotropic packing of the tetraazamacrocycle in a lamellar structure induces an exceptional reactivity of these copper complexes. We show for the first time that the organic-inorganic environment of copper complexes in a silica matrix fully model the protecting role of protein in metalloenzymes. For the first time an oxygenated dicopper(II) complex can be isolated in a stable form at room temperature, and the reduced Cu(2) (I,I) species can be regenerated after several adsorption-desorption cycles. These data also demonstrate that the coordination scheme and reactivity of the copper cyclams within the solid are quite different from that observed in solution.

https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00458333