Arun Sridharan
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borntoarun.bsky.social
Arun Sridharan
@borntoarun.bsky.social
Organometallic chemist working in industry, rock climber, former runner, amateur cook. NJ native (youse) living in TX (y’all).
Back in 2020, soon after I had isolated the Fe-S cluster terminal imido complex, Dan remarked “I wonder what happens if you oxidize it.” Five years later, we finally have the answer: pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
Nitrogen Subvalency in a Four-Member Redox Series of Iron–Sulfur Cluster Imido Complexes
Imido complexes of high-spin 3d metals can feature N subvalency, wherein configurations with hole character at N contribute significantly to the ground state electronic structure. Reported herein are ...
pubs.acs.org
November 3, 2025 at 1:23 PM
Periodic Trends in M–Fe Interactions across an Isostructural and Isoelectronic Series of [MFe3S4] Clusters (M = V, Cr, Mo, W) | Journal of the American Chemical Society pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
Periodic Trends in M–Fe Interactions across an Isostructural and Isoelectronic Series of [MFe3S4] Clusters (M = V, Cr, Mo, W)
The Mo nitrogenase is more efficient for N2 reduction than the alternative nitrogenases for reasons that are not fully understood. A set of related hypotheses center on the Mo ion facilitating electron delocalization, which could aid in substrate activation and/or provide enhanced stability during turnover, among other possibilities. To understand how the incorporation of Mo or other ‘heterometals’ influences the electronic structures of Fe-S clusters, we prepared and characterized an isostructural and isoelectronic series of [MFe3S4] clusters (M = V, Cr, Mo, W) that includes the first example of a [CrFe3S4] cluster. Comparison of the clusters’ structural, spectroscopic, and computed properties reveals that the Mo- and W-containing clusters have greater M–Fe delocalization than those containing only 3d metals. Although the [CrFe3S4] cluster adopts the same ground spin state as the other clusters (S = 3/2), the smaller Cr atom engages in substantially attenuated─though not fully obliterated─M–Fe delocalization. Moreover, electrochemical and Mössbauer spectroscopic studies reveal that the clusters with more substantial M–Fe delocalization have more electron-rich Fe sites. Such trends, if they apply to the nitrogenase cofactors, could account for the greater efficiency of the Mo nitrogenase in biological nitrogen fixation.
pubs.acs.org
September 3, 2025 at 6:15 PM