Hydride Transfer from Iron(II) Hydride Compounds to NAD(P)<sup>+</sup> Analogues

Abstract

Iron­(II) hydride complexes of the “piano-stool” type, Cp*­(P-P)­FeH (P-P = dppe (<b>1H</b>), dppbz (<b>2H</b>), dppm (<b>3H</b>), dcpe (<b>4H</b>)) were examined as hydride donors in the reduction of <i>N</i>-benzylpyridinium and acridinium salts. Two pathways of hydride transfer, “single-step H<sup>–</sup>” transfer to pyridinium and a “two-step (e<sup>–</sup>/H<sup>•</sup>)” transfer for acridinium reduction, were observed. When 1-benzylnicotinamide cation (BNA<sup>+</sup>) was used as an H<sup>–</sup> acceptor, kinetic studies suggested that <b>BNA</b><sup><b>+</b></sup> was reduced at the C6 position, affording 1,6-BNAH, which can be converted to the more thermally stable 1,4-product. The rate constant <i>k</i> of H<sup>–</sup> transfer was very sensitive to the bite angle of P–Fe–P in Cp*­(P-P)­FeH and ranged from 3.23 × 10<sup>–3</sup> M<sup>–1</sup> s<sup>–1</sup> for dppe to 1.74 × 10<sup>–1</sup> M<sup>–1</sup> s<sup>–1</sup> for dppm. The results obtained from reduction of a range of <i>N</i>-benzylpyridinium derivatives suggest that H<sup>–</sup> transfer is more likely to be charge controlled. In the reduction of 10-methylacridinium ion (<b>Acr</b><sup><b>+</b></sup>), the reaction was initiated by an e<sup>–</sup> transfer (ET) process and then followed by rapid disproportionation reactions to produce <b>Acr</b><sub><b>2</b></sub> dimer and release of H<sub>2</sub>. To achieve H<sup>•</sup> transfer after ET from [Cp*­(P-P)­FeH]<sup>+</sup> to acridine radicals, the bulkier acridinium salt 9-phenyl-10-methylacridinium (<b>PhAcr</b><sup><b>+</b></sup>) was selected as an acceptor. More evidence for this “two-step (e<sup>–</sup>/H<sup>•</sup>)” process was derived from the characterization of <b>PhAcr<sup>•</sup></b> and [<b>4H</b>]<sup><b>+</b></sup> radicals by EPR spectra and by the crystallographic structure confirmation of [<b>4H</b>]<sup><b>+</b></sup>. Our mechanistic understanding of fundamental H<sup>–</sup> transfer from iron­(II) hydrides to NAD<sup>+</sup> analogues provides insight into establishing attractive bio-organometallic transformation cycles driven by iron catalysis

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