How electron spin coupling affects catalytic oxygen activation

A team at the EPR4Energy joint lab of HZB and MPI CEC has developed a new THz EPR spectroscopy method to study the catalytic activation of molecular oxygen by copper complexes.

A team at the EPR4Energy joint lab of HZB and MPI CEC has developed a new THz EPR spectroscopy method to study the catalytic activation of molecular oxygen by copper complexes. © T. Lohmiller/HZB

A team at the EPR4Energy joint lab of HZB and MPI CEC has developed a new THz EPR spectroscopy method to study the catalytic activation of molecular oxygen by copper complexes. The method allows insights into previously inaccessible spin-spin interactions and the function of novel catalytic and magnetic materials.

 

Molecular oxygen (O2) is a preferred oxidant in green chemistry. However, activation of O2 and control of its reactivity requires precise adjustment of the spin states in the reactive intermediates. In nature, this is achieved by metalloenzymes that bind O2 at iron or copper ions, and spin-flip processes are enabled through metal-mediated spin-orbit couplings allowing for mixing of states. In the case of type III dicopper metalloproteins involved in oxygen transport and oxygenation of phenolic substrates, little was known about the pathway leading to a dicopper peroxo key species with a stabilized singlet ground state after triplet oxygen binding.

Through a sophisticated ligand design, the research group led by Prof. Franc Meyer at the University of Göttingen has now succeeded in isolating a series of model complexes that mimic the initial stage of oxygen binding at dicopper sites and exhibit a triplet ground state. Researchers from the EPR4Energy joint lab of HZB and MPI CEC complemented this breakthrough in chemical synthesis with a new approach of THz-EPR spectroscopy. This method, developed in Alexander Schnegg's group at MPI CEC, was applied for the first time to study the function-determining antisymmetric exchange in coupled dicopper(II) complexes.

The new method allowed for detection of the entirety of spin state transitions in the system, which leads to propose antisymmetric exchange as an efficient mixing mechanism for the triplet-to-singlet intersystem crossing in biorelevant peroxodicopper(II) intermediates. Thomas Lohmiller, one of the first authors of the study, explains, "In addition to the knowledge gained about this important system, our method opens up the possibility of studying previously inaccessible spin-spin interactions in a variety of novel catalytic and magnetic materials."

CEC/A. Schnegg

  • Copy link

You might also be interested in

  • Superconducting TES array X-ray spectrometer goes into operation at BESSY II
    Science Highlight
    15.06.2026
    Superconducting TES array X-ray spectrometer goes into operation at BESSY II
    Europe's first and only TES-spectrometer at a synchrotron source is now in operation at BESSY II, developed within a collaboration between the HZB, the MPI-CEC (Mühlheim-an-der-Ruhr, Germany) and the NIST (Boulder CO, USA). The photon detection efficiency of the new instrument exceeds that of wavelength-dispersive X-ray emission spectrometers by a factor of 100 to 1000.  It will be used to investigate the electronic properties of atomically thin layers, nanostructures and highly diluted atomic and molecular samples. The team is looking forward to receiving exciting research proposals from the user community.
  • A New Era in Catalysis: ASCEND Launch in Berlin, €30 Million in Funding
    News
    12.06.2026
    A New Era in Catalysis: ASCEND Launch in Berlin, €30 Million in Funding
    On 11 June 2026, the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin (HZB) in Adlershof hosted the launch of ASCEND (Accelerated Solutions for Catalysis using Emerging Nanotechnology and Digital Innovation). The event took place in the presence of the Minister of Research, Dorothee Bär, President of the Helmholtz Association, Prof. Dr. Martin Keller, and President of the Max Planck Society, Prof. Dr. Patrick Cramer. Bringing together leading partners from industry and research, ASCEND is supported by BMFTR with €30 million in funding and officially started on 1 April 2026. The initiative aims to accelerate the discovery of next-generation catalysts and enable more sustainable chemical processes.
  • X-ray analysis reveals overpainted fascist symbols
    Science Highlight
    08.06.2026
    X-ray analysis reveals overpainted fascist symbols
    Erich Mercker was a successful painter during the Nazi era and in the years that followed. After 1945, he covered up Nazi symbols in at least one of his paintings. With an interdisciplinary team, physicist Dr Ioanna Mantouvalou reports on this study in the Nature Journal Heritage Science.