COPPER(II) COMPLEXES IMMOBILIZED ON A POLYMERIC MATRIX - THERMODYNAMICS, SPECTROSCOPY, AND MOLECULAR MODELING

Citation
E. Chiessi et al., COPPER(II) COMPLEXES IMMOBILIZED ON A POLYMERIC MATRIX - THERMODYNAMICS, SPECTROSCOPY, AND MOLECULAR MODELING, Inorganic chemistry, 34(10), 1995, pp. 2600-2609
Citations number
55
Categorie Soggetti
Chemistry Inorganic & Nuclear
Journal title
ISSN journal
00201669
Volume
34
Issue
10
Year of publication
1995
Pages
2600 - 2609
Database
ISI
SICI code
0020-1669(1995)34:10<2600:CCIOAP>2.0.ZU;2-K
Abstract
Polymer-immobilized copper(II) complexes were prepared by using deoxyl actit-1-yl (1), 2-substituted pentanedioic acid (2), and 2-substituted propanoic acid (3) derivatives of chitosan (4) as polymeric ligands. The thermodynamics of formation, based on both equilibrium dialysis an d microcalorimetric experiments, suggest that the functional groups in each monomeric residue are an effective site of binding for one metal ion. The enthalpies of complex formation (25 degrees C) are -(35.7 +/ - 2.4) x 10(2) and -(46.0 +/- 7.5) x 10(2) J/mol for Cu(II)-1 at pH 5. 6 and 8.0, respectively, and (13.6 +/- 2.0) x 10(2) J/mol for Cu(II)-2 at pH 4.4, while the entropies of formation are around 65 J . mol(-1) deg(-1) in the former two cases and 96 J . mol(-1). deg(-1) in the la tter one. ESR results (100 K) indicate that all these compounds basica lly have a tetragonal symmetry, but visible CD spectra suggest that th e order of increasing departure from this geometry is Cu-4 approximate to Cu-3 < Cu-2 less than or equal to Cu-1, the arrangement of ligands around the central metal ion being more symmetric in 3 and 4 for the lack of sterically constraining side chains. Molecular modeling of Cu( II)-1 and Cu(II)-2 active sites was performed by mimicking different p H conditions and using both a series of pairwise additive energy terms and a new distance-dependent dielectric function to tackle electrosta tic effects that are believed to dominate metal-macromolecule interact ions in solution. Hypothetical models of the metal complexes are prese nted and supported by experimental results, as far as the Limited data allow. Implications of steric effects on the computed structures are also discussed.