Chloride‐ and Hydrosulfide‐Bound 2Fe Complexes as Models of the Oxygen‐Stable State of [FeFe] Hydrogenase

Author:

Liu Yu‐Chiao1ORCID,Chu Kai‐Ti1,Wang Hong‐Ru1,Lee Gene‐Hsiang2,Tseng Mei‐Chun1,Wang Cheng‐Hsin1,Horng Yih‐Chern3ORCID,Chiang Ming‐Hsi14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Chemistry Academia Sinica, Nankang Taipei 115 Taiwan

2. Instrumentation Center National Taiwan University Taipei 106 Taiwan

3. Department of Chemistry National Changhua University of Education Changhua 500 Taiwan

4. Department of Medicinal and Applied Chemistry Kaohsiung Medical University Kaohsiung 807 Taiwan

Abstract

Abstract[FeFe] hydrogenases demonstrate remarkable catalytic efficiency in hydrogen evolution and oxidation processes. However, susceptibility of these enzymes to oxygen‐induced degradation impedes their practical deployment in hydrogen‐production devices and fuel cells. Recent investigations into the oxygen‐stable (Hinact) state of the H‐cluster revealed its inherent capacity to resist oxygen degradation. Herein, we present findings on Cl‐ and SH‐bound [2Fe‐2S] complexes, bearing relevance to the oxygen‐stable state within a biological context. A characteristic attribute of these complexes is the terminal Cl/SH ligation to the iron center bearing the CO bridge. Structural analysis of the t‐Cl demonstrates a striking resemblance to the Hinact state of DdHydAB and CbA5H. The t‐Cl/t‐SH exhibit reversible oxidation, with both redox species, electronically, being the first biomimetic analogs to the Htrans and Hinact states. These complexes exhibit notable resistance against oxygen‐induced decomposition, supporting the potential oxygen‐resistant nature of the Htrans and Hinact states. The swift reductive release of the Cl‐/SH‐group demonstrates its labile and kinetically controlled binding. The findings garnered from these investigations offer valuable insights into properties of the enzymatic O2‐stable state, and key factors governing deactivation and reactivation conversion. This work contributes to the advancement of bio‐inspired molecular catalysts and the integration of enzymes and artificial catalysts into H2‐evolution devices and fuel‐cell applications.

Funder

Academia Sinica

Publisher

Wiley

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