
Alison Fout
· Professor, Associate Head for Graduate Studies, Davidson Chair in ScienceVerifiedTexas A&M University · Chemistry
Active 2004–2025
About
Professor Alison Fout is the principal investigator of the Fout Group at Texas A&M University. She holds a BS from Gannon University, an MS from UNC Charlotte, a PhD from Indiana University, and completed postdoctoral training at Harvard University. Professor Fout was drawn to Texas A&M by the fantastic students, excellent colleagues, collegial atmosphere, and outstanding infrastructure. Her mentoring approach is tailored to individual students, balancing hands-on scientific discussion with a more independent style depending on each student's needs, with the goal of fostering happy and productive students. She finds the most rewarding part of research to be seeing ideas come to fruition and watching students grow from assistants in the lab into colleagues. Outside of work, she enjoys reading, often taking book recommendations from her students, which provides her insight into their personalities.
Research signals
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Research topics
- Inorganic chemistry
- Organic chemistry
- Chemistry
- Photochemistry
- Medicinal chemistry
- Physical chemistry
- Stereochemistry
Selected publications
Dalton Transactions · 2025-01-01 · 1 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorCorrespondingThe synthesis of early transition metal complexes with a tripodal ligand reveals how different metal centers influence ligand binding, allowing for a direct comparison of distinct coordination geometries. Image partly generated with AI.
Selective Stepwise Reduction of Nitrate and Nitrite to Dinitrogen or Ammonia
Journal of the American Chemical Society · 2025-02-28 · 34 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorCorrespondingThis study reports a method for the selective reduction of NO3– and NO2– to N2 or NH3, extending prior work in our lab where NO3– was reduced to NO by [N(afaCy)3Fe]OTf2 (N(afaCy)3 = tris(5-cyclohexyl-amineazafulvene-2-methyl)amine, OTf = triflate). The first pathway involves the reduction of NO2– to N2, where the NO generated in the initial step is transformed to N2O by PPh3 and further reduced to N2 by the [N(afaCy)3Fe]OTf2 complex. An alternative pathway showcases the reduction of the bound NO complex, [N(afaCy)3Fe(NO)]2+, to NH3 using chemical reductants, albeit with a modest yield of 29%. Confirmation of the nitrogen source as NO is established through 15N labeling studies. Hydroxylamine (NH2OH) is proposed as a plausible intermediate in the reduction of bound NO, supported by independent NH2OH reduction experiments and computational studies. Nature employs a well-orchestrated, stepwise process involving several enzymes to reduce N-containing oxyanions, and this approach provides valuable insights into the stepwise reduction mechanisms of nitrate and nitrite, yielding NH3 or N2 as the product.
Synthetic strategies for oxyanion reduction: Metal-based insights and innovations
Coordination Chemistry Reviews · 2025-05-21 · 7 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorCorrespondingNonheme Iron Catalyst Selectively Activates Oxygen to Hydrogen Peroxide
JACS Au · 2025-06-11 · 2 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorCorrespondingIron complexes are known for their excellent reactivity toward the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR), which proceeds via two possible pathways: a two-electron/two-proton (2e–/2H+) process to form hydrogen peroxide or a four-electron/four-proton (4e–/4H+) process to form water. Developing catalysts that enable selective oxygen reduction remains a challenge. Inspired by heme-based systems, we designed two iron complexes incorporating secondary coordination sphere interactions to investigate their influence on the ORR selectivity. The complexes, [Py2Py(afaCy)2Fe]OTf2 and [N(afaCy)3Fe]OTf2, were evaluated for their catalytic activity using decamethylferrocene as the reductant, with reaction progress monitored via absorbance spectroscopy. [Py2Py(afaCy)2Fe]OTf2 exhibited a selectivity profile comparable to iron porphyrin but with a slower kinetic rate, likely due to the steric hindrance from ligand functionalization. [N(afaCy)3Fe]OTf2 demonstrated exceptional selectivity toward the 2e–/2H+ pathway, a rare observation for nonheme iron complexes. Kinetic measurements revealed that the catalytic reaction with [N(afaCy)3Fe]OTf2 follows second-order kinetics with a rate constant of 81 mM–1 s–1. We propose that the rate-determining step involves electron transfer from decamethylferrocene to the hydroperoxo iron(III) complex, occurring through a stepwise proton transfer/electron transfer (PTET) or electron transfer/proton transfer (ETPT) process, followed by hydrogen peroxide dissociation.
Organometallics · 2025-01-17
articleOpen accessSenior authorCorrespondingHigh-valent iron complexes play a crucial role in the oxidation of organic substrates, especially in C-H bond functionalization reactions in biology. This paper investigates the reactivity of nonporphyrin tripodal ligands featuring a secondary coordination sphere, focusing on their prospective ability to stabilize high-valent iron-oxo species. Using NMR spectroscopy and X-ray crystallography, we detail the formation of an Fe(III)-alkoxide complex through intramolecular C-H bond activation, providing insight into the potential transient formation of a high-valent iron-oxo intermediate. While attempts to observe an Fe(IV)-oxo complex were unsuccessful, our findings underscore the significance of the ligand electronic environment in stabilizing reactive iron species for C-H bond activation.
In Memory of Gabor Somorjai (1935–2025)
Catalysis Letters · 2025-11-16
articleOpen accessDalton Transactions · 2025-01-01 · 1 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorCorrespondingThe reduction of toxic Cr VI to benign Cr III by a non-heme iron complex and quantification of the resultant iron( iii )-oxo by a paramagnetic 1 H NMR calibration curve.
Chemical Communications · 2024-01-01 · 4 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorCorrespondingThis study explores the versatile binding properties of a tetrapodal ligand framework with nickel, demonstrating significant ligand fluxionality through the interconversions of several complexes. Kinetic studies using UV-vis and NMR techniques underscore the pivotal role of solvent coordination in initiating these dynamic processes. A unique reverse-dative Ni → Ag interaction provides another approach in modifying nickel's geometry.
Fe-Si_complexes_for_hydrogenation
ioChem-BD Computational Chemistry Datasets · 2024-05-20
datasetOpen accessSenior authorAspatial Oxyanion Reduction Catalysis
2024-03-28
reportOpen access1st authorCorrespondingThe scientifically challenging problem of catalytically reducing oxyanions was explored and presented great opportunities in terms of the environment, economics and energy self-sufficiency.Oxyanions are pervasive as they are found in many areas of technology, all forms of life, in minerals, and as synthetic materials.Given their ubiquity, the contamination of inorganic oxyanions in drinking water is a national problem as 26 states and Puerto Rico have reported high concentrations of these harmful pollutants.The goals achieved by this research was to catalytically investigate the reduction of new oxyanions utilizing sustainable earth abundant catalysts featuring bio-inspired ligands.Further, ligand modifications will be explored to understand the impact on oxyanion reduction, mechanistic studies, and for electrocatalytic oxyanion reduction.
Recent grants
NIH · $99k · 2012
NSF · $666k · 2014–2019
Hyperpolarization Catalysts for in situ Mechanistic Studies
NSF · $475k · 2021–2023
Frequent coauthors
- 74 shared
Ellen M. Matson
University of Rochester
- 65 shared
Daniel J. Mindiola
University of Pennsylvania
- 43 shared
Yun Ji Park
Korea Institute of Science and Technology
- 37 shared
Jeffery A. Bertke
Georgetown University
- 30 shared
Michael J. Drummond
Saint Mary's College
- 30 shared
John C. Huffman
- 30 shared
Theodore A. Betley
Harvard University
- 28 shared
Mark J. Nilges
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Labs
Awards & honors
- Thieme Chemistry Journals Award (2019)
- American Chemical Society Emergent Investigator in Bioinorga…
- Helen Corley Petit Scholar, UIUC (2018)
- Ed Stiefel Young Investigator Award, Metals in Biology GRC (…
- Camille Dreyfus Teacher Scholar Award (2017)
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