8,790 research outputs found

    Cockpit Resource Management (CRM) training in the 1550th combat crew training wing

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    The training program the 1550th Combat Crew Training Wing at Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico, implemented in September 1985 is discussed. The program is called Aircrew Coordination Training (ACT), and it is designed specifically to help aircrew members work more effectively as a team in their respective aircraft and hopefully to reduce human factors-related accidents. The scope of the 1550th CCTW's training responsibilities is described, the structure of the program, along with a brief look at the content of the academic part of the course. Then the Mission-Oriented Simulator Training (MOST) program is discussed; a program similar to the Line Oriented Flight Training (LOFT) programs. Finally, the future plans for the Aircrew Coordination Training Program at the 1550th is discussed

    Oxygen Activation by Mononuclear Mn, Co, and Ni Centers in Biology and Synthetic Complexes

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    The active sites of metalloenzymes that catalyze O2-dependent reactions generally contain iron or copper ions. However, several enzymes are capable of activating O2 at manganese or nickel centers instead, and a handful of dioxygenases exhibit activity when substituted with cobalt. This minireview summarizes the catalytic properties of oxygenases and oxidases with mononuclear Mn, Co, or Ni active sites, including oxalate-degrading oxidases, catechol dioxygenases, and quercetin dioxygenase. In addition, recent developments in the O2 reactivity of synthetic Mn, Co, or Ni complexes are described, with an emphasis on the nature of reactive intermediates featuring superoxo-, peroxo-, or oxo-ligands. Collectively, the biochemical and synthetic studies discussed herein reveal the possibilities and limitations of O2 activation at these three ā€œoverlookedā€ metals

    Bimetallic Complexes Supported by a Redox-Active Ligand with Fused Pincer-Type Coordination Sites

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    The remarkable chemistry of mononuclear complexes featuring tridentate, meridionally chelating ā€œpincerā€ ligands has stimulated the development of ligand frameworks containing multiple pincer sites. Here, the coordination chemistry of a novel pentadentate ligand (LN3O2) that provides two closely spaced NNO pincer-type compartments fused together at a central diarylamido unit is described. The trianionic LN3O2 chelate supports homobimetallic structures in which each M(II) ion (M = Co, Cu, Zn) is bound in a meridional fashion by the bridging diarylamido N atom and O,N-donors of the salicyaldimine arms. The metal centers are also coordinated by a mono- or bidentate auxiliary ligand (Laux), resulting in complexes with the general form [M2(LN3O2)(Laux)2]+ (where Laux = 1-methyl-benzimidazole (1MeBI), 2,2ā€²-bipyridine (bpy), 4,4ā€²-dibromo-2,2ā€²-bipyridine (bpyBr2), or (S)-2-(4-isopropyl-4,5-dihydrooxazolyl)pyridine (S-iPrOxPy)). The fused nature of the NNO pincer sites results in short metalā€“metal distances ranging from 2.70 ƅ for [Co2(LN3O2) (bpy)2]+ to 3.28 ƅ for [Zn2(LN3O2) (bpy)2]+, as revealed by X-ray crystallography. The complexes possess C2 symmetry due to the twisting of the aryl rings of the Ī¼-NAr2 core; spectroscopic studies indicate that chiral Laux ligands, such as S-iPrOxPy, are capable of controlling the helical sense of the LN3O2 scaffold. Since the four- or five-coordinate M(II) centers are linked solely by the amido moiety, each features an open coordination site in the intermetallic region, allowing for the possibility of metalā€“metal cooperativity in small-molecule activation. Indeed, the dicobalt(II) complex [Co2(LN3O2) (bpyBr2)2]+ reacts with O2 to yield a dicobalt(III) species with a Ī¼-1,2-peroxo ligand. The bpy-containing complexes exhibit rich electrochemical properties due to multiple metal- and ligand-based redox events across a wide (3.0 V) potential window. Using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy and density functional theory (DFT), it was determined that one-electron oxidation of [Co2(LN3O2) (bpy)2]+ results in formation of a S = 1/2 species with a LN3O2-based radical coupled to low-spin Co(II) centers

    Synthesis of Homo- and Heterobimetallic Ni\u3csup\u3eII\u3c/sup\u3eā€“M\u3csup\u3eII\u3c/sup\u3e (M = Fe, Co, Ni, Zn) Complexes Based on an Unsymmetric Ligand Framework: Structures, Spectroscopic Features, and Redox Properties

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    Several homo- and heterobimetallic NiIIā€“MII complexes (MII = Fe, Co, Ni, Zn) supported by an unsymmetric polydentate ligand (L13āˆ’) are reported (L13āˆ’ is the trianion of 2-[bis(2-hydroxy-3,5-tert-butylphenyl)aminomethyl]-4-methyl-6-[(2-pyridylmethyl)iminomethyl]phenol). The L13āˆ’ chelate provides two distinct coordination environments: a planar tridentate {N2O} site (A) and a tetradentate {NO3} site (B). Reaction of L13āˆ’ with equimolar amounts of NiII and MII salts provides bimetallic complexes in which the NiII ion exclusively occupies the tetragonal A-site and the MII ion is found in the tripodal B-site. X-ray crystal structures revealed that the two metal centers are bridged by the central phenolate donor of L13āˆ’ and an anionic X-ligand, where X = Ī¼-1,1-acetate, hydroxide, or methoxide. The metal ions are separated by 3.0ā€“3.1 ƅ in the MAMBX structures, where MA and MB indicate the ion located in the A and B sites, respectively, and X represents the second bridging ligand. Analysis of magnetic data and UVā€“Visā€“NIR spectra indicate that, in all cases, the two metal ions adopt high-spin states in solution. The NiAII centers undergo one-electron reduction at āˆ’1.17 V vs. SCE, while the NiII and CoII ions in the phenolate-rich B-site are reduced at lower potentials. Significantly, the NiAII center possesses three open or labile coordination sites in a meridional geometry, which are generally occupied by solvent-derived ligands in the crystal structures. The NiMBX complexes serve as structural mimics of heterometallic Ni-containing sites in biology, such as the C-cluster of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH)

    A Synthetic Model of the Nonheme Ironā€“Superoxo Intermediate of Cysteine Dioxygenase

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    A nonheme Fe(II) complex (1) that models substrate-bound cysteine dioxygenase (CDO) reacts with O2 at āˆ’80 Ā°C to yield a purple intermediate (2). Analysis with spectroscopic and computational methods determined that 2 features a thiolate-ligated Fe(III) center bound to a superoxide radical, mimicking the putative structure of a key CDO intermediate

    A Synthetic Model of the Putative Fe(II)-Iminobenzosemiquinonate Intermediate in the Catalytic Cycle of \u3cem\u3eo\u3c/em\u3e-Aminophenol Dioxygenases

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    The oxidative ring cleavage of aromatic substrates by nonheme Fe dioxygenases is thought to involve formation of a ferrousā€“(substrate radical) intermediate. Here we describe the synthesis of the trigonal-bipyramdial complex Fe(Ph2Tp)(ISQtBu) (2), the first synthetic example of an iron(II) center bound to an iminobenzosemiquinonate (ISQ) radical. The unique electronic structure of this S = 3/2 complex and its one-electron oxidized derivative ([3]+) have been established on the basis of crystallographic, spectroscopic, and computational analyses. These findings further demonstrate the viability of Fe2+ā€“ISQ intermediates in the catalytic cycles of o-aminophenol dioxygenases

    Preparation of a Semiquinonate-Bridged Diiron(II) Complex and Elucidation of its Geometric and Electronic Structures

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    The synthesis and crystal structure of a diiron(II) complex containing a bridging semiquinonate radical are presented. The unique electronic structure of this S = 7/2 complex is examined with spectroscopic (absorption, EPR, resonance Raman) and computational methods

    Spectroscopic and Computational Studies of Reversible O\u3csub\u3e2\u3c/sub\u3e Binding by a Cobalt Complex of Relevance to Cysteine Dioxygenase

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    The substitution of non-native metal ions into metalloenzyme active sites is a common strategy for gaining insights into enzymatic structure and function. For some nonheme iron dioxygenases, replacement of the Fe(II) center with a redox-active, divalent transition metal (e.g., Mn, Co, Ni, Cu) gives rise to an enzyme with equal or greater activity than the wild-type enzyme. In this manuscript, we apply this metal-substitution approach to synthetic models of the enzyme cysteine dioxygenase (CDO). CDO is a nonheme iron dioxygenase that initiates the catabolism of L-cysteine by converting this amino acid to the corresponding sulfinic acid. Two mononuclear Co(II) complexes (3 and 4) have been prepared with the general formula [Co2+(TpR2)(CysOEt)] (R = Ph (3) or Me (4); TpR2 = hydrotris(pyrazol-1-yl)borate substituted with R-groups at the 3- and 5-positions, and CysOEt is the anion of L-cysteine ethyl ester). These Co(II) complexes mimic the active-site structure of substrate-bound CDO and are analogous to functional iron-based CDO models previously reported in the literature. Characterization with X-ray crystallography and/or 1H NMR spectroscopy revealed that 3 and 4 possess five-coordinate structures featuring facially-coordinating TpR2 and S,N-bidentate CysOEt ligands. The electronic properties of these high-spin (S = 3/2) complexes were interrogated with UV-visible absorption and X-band electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopies. The air-stable nature of complex 3 replicates the inactivity of cobalt-substituted CDO. In contrast, complex 4 reversibly binds O2 at reduced temperatures to yield an orange chromophore (4-O2). Spectroscopic (EPR, resonance Raman) and computational (density functional theory, DFT) analyses indicate that 4-O2 is a S = 1/2 species featuring a low-spin Co(III) center bound to an end-on (Ī·1) superoxo ligand. DFT calculations were used to evaluate the energetics of key steps in the reaction mechanism. Collectively, these results have elucidated the role of electronic factors (e.g., spin-state, d-electron count, metalā€“ligand covalency) in facilitating O2 activation and S-dioxygenation in CDO and related models
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