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DFT Study of the Active Intermediate in the Fenton Reaction
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2001
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EngineeringPrimary IntermediateChemistryChemical EngineeringReaction IntermediateRedox ChemistryInorganic ChemistryPhotochemistryBiochemistryRadical (Chemistry)Active IntermediateSpectroelectrochemistryCatalysisHydrogenElectrochemistryOxygen Reduction ReactionNatural SciencesWater MoleculeChemical KineticsDeoxygenation
Density functional theory has been used to investigate the nature of the oxidizing agent in the Fenton reaction. Starting from the primary intermediate [FeII(H2O)5H2O2]2+, we show that the oxygen-oxygen bond breaking mechanism has a small activation energy and could therefore demonstrate the catalytic effect of the metal complex. The O-O bond cleavage of the coordinated H2O2, however, does not lead to a free hydroxyl radical. Instead, the leaving hydroxyl radical abstracts a hydrogen from an adjacent coordinated water leading to the formation of a second Fe-OH bond and of a water molecule. Along this reaction path the primary intermediate transforms into the [FeIV(H2O)4(OH)2]2+ complex and in a second step into a more stable high valent ferryl-oxo complex [FeIV(H2O)5O]2+. We show that the energy profile along the reaction path is strongly affected by the presence of an extra water molecule located near the iron complex. The alternative intermediate [FeII(H2O)4(OOH-)(H3O+)]2+ suggested in the literature has been also investigated, but it is found to be unstable against the primary intermediate. Our results support a picture in which an FeIV-oxo complex is the most likely candidate as the active intermediate in the Fenton reaction, as indeed first proposed by Bray and Gorin already in 1932.