- Hou, Kaipeng;
- Börgel, Jonas;
- Jiang, Henry ZH;
- SantaLucia, Daniel J;
- Kwon, Hyunchul;
- Zhuang, Hao;
- Chakarawet, Khetpakorn;
- Rohde, Rachel C;
- Taylor, Jordan W;
- Dun, Chaochao;
- Paley, Maria V;
- Turkiewicz, Ari B;
- Park, Jesse G;
- Mao, Haiyan;
- Zhu, Ziting;
- Alp, E Ercan;
- Zhao, Jiyong;
- Hu, Michael Y;
- Lavina, Barbara;
- Peredkov, Sergey;
- Lv, Xudong;
- Oktawiec, Julia;
- Meihaus, Katie R;
- Pantazis, Dimitrios A;
- Vandone, Marco;
- Colombo, Valentina;
- Bill, Eckhard;
- Urban, Jeffrey J;
- Britt, R David;
- Grandjean, Fernande;
- Long, Gary J;
- DeBeer, Serena;
- Neese, Frank;
- Reimer, Jeffrey A;
- Long, Jeffrey R
In nature, nonheme iron enzymes use dioxygen to generate high-spin iron(IV)=O species for a variety of oxygenation reactions. Although synthetic chemists have long sought to mimic this reactivity, the enzyme-like activation of O2 to form high-spin iron(IV) = O species remains an unrealized goal. Here, we report a metal-organic framework featuring iron(II) sites with a local structure similar to that in α-ketoglutarate-dependent dioxygenases. The framework reacts with O2 at low temperatures to form high-spin iron(IV) = O species that are characterized using in situ diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform, in situ and variable-field Mössbauer, Fe Kβ x-ray emission, and nuclear resonance vibrational spectroscopies. In the presence of O2, the framework is competent for catalytic oxygenation of cyclohexane and the stoichiometric conversion of ethane to ethanol.