Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.52, No.4, 1676-1678, 2013
Sequential Photooxidation of a Pt(II) (Diimine)cysteamine Complex: Intermolecular Oxygen Atom Transfer versus Sulfinate Formation
The thiolato complex [platinum(II) (bipyridine)(N,S-aminoethanethiolate)](+)Ch(-) (1) undergoes sequential reactions with singlet oxygen to initially form the corresponding sulfenato complex [platinum(II) (bipyridine)(N,S(=O)-aminoethansulfenate)](+) (2) followed by a much slower reaction to the corresponding sulfinato complex. In contrast with many platinum dithiolato complexes, 1 does not produce any singlet oxygen, but its rate constant for singlet oxygen removal (k(T)) is quite large (3.2 x 10(7) M-1 s(-1)) and chemical reaction accounts for ca. 25% of the value of k(T). The behavior of 1 is strikingly different from that of the complex platinum(II) (bipyridine)(1,2-benzenditholate) (4). The latter complex reacts with 102 (either from an external sensitizer or via a self-sensitized pathway) to form a sulfinato complex. These two very different reactivity pathways imply different mechanistic pathways: The reaction of 1 with O-1(2) must involve O-O bond cleavage and intermolecular oxygen atom transfer, while the reactive intermediate in complex 4 collapses intramolecularly to the sulfinato moiety.