Inorganic & Coordination Chemistry, Invited lecture
IC-011

High-valent Metal-oxo and Imido Cores in Chemistry and Biology

R. Kallol1
1Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Brook-Taylor Strasse 2, Berlin, Germany, kallol.ray@chemie.hu-berlin.de.

Although terminal CoIV-O, NiIII-O and CuIII-O intermediates have been implicated as active intermediates in a number of important chemical transformations, no spectroscopic evidences for the species are available, leaving the pathway uncertain. Evidences of the presence of terminal M-O units (M = Cu(III), Ni(III) or Co(IV)) are to date limited to mass spectrometric studies in the gas phase. Theory suggests that they should be powerful oxidants, perhaps even more reactive than the related [FeIV=O]2+ units that have been extensively studied. In this presentation, we will summarize some of our recent efforts to stabilize the elusive metal-oxo and isoelectronic metal-imido units of Cu(III), Co(IV) and Ni(III) ) in solution phase at low temperatures. The high-valent metal-oxo or metal-imido assignments are made on the basis of a variety of spectroscopic methods. The reactivity of the intermediates in hydrogen atom abstraction, oxo transfer reactions and dioxygen reduction reactions are also discussed.