ironIVoxo
IronIVoxo is a term used in speculative chemistry and in some science-fiction contexts to denote a high-valent iron–oxo species. In formal inorganic chemistry, the closest real-world analogue is an iron(IV) oxo complex, written Fe(IV)=O, or ferryl species, in which iron is formally in the +4 oxidation state bound to an oxide ligand. The coinage ironIVoxo as a single word is not an official chemical name but a shorthand used to discuss the concept of a stable or metastable Fe(IV)=O species within a designed ligand framework.
Chemical characteristics: Ferryl/Fe(IV)=O centers are strong oxidants capable of transferring oxygen to substrates. Depending on ligands,
Synthesis and stability: In real chemistry, Fe(IV)=O species are typically generated in situ by oxidation of
Applications and context: If realized, ironIVoxo-like species would be of interest as catalysts for selective oxidation