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Published June 18, 2013 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Reduction potentials of heterometallic manganese-oxido cubane complexes modulated by redox-inactive metals

Abstract

Understanding the effect of redox-inactive metals on the properties of biological and heterogeneous water oxidation catalysts is important both fundamentally and for improvement of future catalyst designs. In this work, heterometallic manganese–oxido cubane clusters [MMn_3O_4] (M = Sr^(2+), Zn^(2+), Sc^(3+), Y^(3+)) structurally relevant to the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) of photosystem II were prepared and characterized. The reduction potentials of these clusters and other related mixed metal manganese–tetraoxido complexes are correlated with the Lewis acidity of the apical redox-inactive metal in a manner similar to a related series of heterometallic manganese–dioxido clusters. The redox potentials of the [SrMn_3O_4] and [CaMn_3O_4] clusters are close, which is consistent with the observation that the OEC is functional only with one of these two metals. Considering our previous studies of [MMn_3O_2] moieties, the present results with more structurally accurate models of the OEC ([MMn_3O_4]) suggest a general relationship between the reduction potentials of heterometallic oxido clusters and the Lewis acidities of incorporated cations that applies to diverse structural motifs. These findings support proposals that one function of calcium in the OEC is to modulate the reduction potential of the cluster to allow electron transfer.

Additional Information

© 2013 National Academy of Sciences. Edited by Harry B. Gray, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, and approved May 3, 2013 (received for review February 11, 2013). Published online before print June 6, 2013. We thank L. M. Henling for assistance with crystallography. This work was supported by the California Institute of Technology, the Searle Scholars Program, the National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER CHE-1151918 (to T.A.), and a Sandia Campus Executive Fellowship (to E.Y.T.). The Bruker KAPPA APEXII X-ray difractometer was purchased via an NSF Chemistry Research Instrumentation award to the California Institute of Technology (CHE-0639094). Author contributions: E.Y.T. and T.A. designed research; E.Y.T. performed research; E.Y.T. and T.A. analyzed data; and E.Y.T. and T.A. wrote the paper. The authors declare no conflict of interest. This article is a PNAS Direct Submission. Data deposition: The atomic coordinates have been deposited in the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre database, www.ccdc.cam.ac.uk/data_request/cif (accession nos. CCDC 923216–923219).

Attached Files

Published - PNAS-2013-Tsui-10084-8.pdf

Supplemental Material - pnas.201302677SI.pdf

Supplemental Material - sd01.txt

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August 22, 2023
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