Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10835215 | Nitric Oxide | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Described are further studies directed towards elucidating the mechanism of the nitric oxide reduction of the copper(II) model system, Cu(dmp)22+ (I, dmp = 2,9-dimethyl-1,10-phenanthroline). The reaction of I with NO in methanol results in the formation of Cu(dmp)2+ (II) and methyl nitrite (CH3ONO), with a second order rate constant kNO = 38.1 Mâ1 sâ1 (298 K). The activation parameters for this reaction in buffered aqueous medium were measured to be ÎHâ¡Â = 41.6 kJ/mol and ÎSâ¡Â = â82.7 kJ/mol deg. The addition of azide ion (N3â) as a competing nucleophile results in a marked acceleration in the rate of the copper(II) reduction. Analysis of the kinetics for the NO reduction of the bulkier Cu(dpp)22+ (IV, dpp = 2,9-diphenyl-1,10-phenanthroline) and the stronger oxidant, Cu (NO2-dmp)22+ (V, NO2-dmp = 5-nitro-2,9-dimethyl-1,10-phenanthroline), gave the second order rate constants kNO = 21.2 and 29.3 Mâ1 sâ1, respectively. These results argue against an outer sphere electron transfer pathway and support a mechanism where the first step involves the formation of a copper-nitrosyl (Cu(II)-NO or Cu(I)-NO+) adduct. This would be followed by the nucleophilic attack on the bound NO and the labilization of RONO to form the nitrite products and the cuprous complex.
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Authors
Mark D. Lim, Kenneth B. Capps, Timothy B. Karpishin, Peter C. Ford,