December 8, 2010
Journal Article

Thermochemistry of Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer Reagents and its Implications

Abstract

Many, if not most, redox reactions are coupled to proton transfers. This includes most common sources of chemical potential energy, from the bioenergetic processes that power cells to the fossil fuel combustion that powers cars. These proton-coupled electron transfer or PCET processes may involve multiple electrons and multiple protons, as in the 4 e–, 4 H+ reduction of dioxygen (O2) to water (eq 1), or can involve one electron and one proton such as the formation of tyrosyl radicals from tyrosine residues (TyrOH) in enzymatic catalytic cycles (eq 2). In addition, many multi-electron, multi-proton processes proceed in one-electron and one-proton steps. Organic reactions that proceed in one-electron steps involve radical intermediates, which play critical roles in a wide range of chemical, biological, and industrial processes. This broad and diverse class of PCET reactions are central to a great many chemical and biochemical processes, from biological catalysis and energy transduction, to bulk industrial chemical processes, to new approaches to solar energy conversion. PCET is therefore of broad and increasing interest, as illustrated by this issue and a number of other recent reviews.

Revised: August 23, 2011 | Published: December 8, 2010

Citation

Warren J.J., T.A. Tronic, and J.M. Mayer. 2010. Thermochemistry of Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer Reagents and its Implications. Chemical Reviews 110, no. 12:6961-7001. PNNL-SA-74457. doi:10.1021/cr100085k