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Are Two Metal Ions Better than One? Mono‐ and Binuclear α‐Diimine‐Re(CO)3 Complexes with Proton‐Responsive Ligands in CO2 Reduction Catalysis.

Authors :
Du, Jia‐Pei
Wilting, Alexander
Siewert, Inke
Source :
Chemistry - A European Journal. 4/11/2019, Vol. 25 Issue 21, p5555-5564. 10p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Here, the reduction chemistry of mono‐ and binuclear α‐diimine‐Re(CO)3 complexes with proton responsive ligands and their application in the electrochemically‐driven CO2 reduction catalysis are presented. The work was aimed to investigate the impact of 1) two metal ions in close proximity and 2) an internal proton source on catalysis. Therefore, three different Re complexes, a binuclear one with a central phenol unit, 3, and two mononuclear, one having a central phenol unit, 1, and one with a methoxy unit, 2, were utilised. All complexes are active in the CO2‐to‐CO conversion and CO is always the major product. The catalytic rate constant kcat for all three complexes is much higher and the overpotential is lower in DMF/water mixtures than in pure DMF (DMF=N,N‐dimethylformamide). Cyclic voltammetry (CV) studies in the absence of substrate revealed that this is due to an accelerated chloride ion loss after initial reduction in DMF/water mixtures in comparison to pure DMF. Chloride ion loss is necessary for subsequent CO2 binding and this step is around ten times faster in the presence of water [2: kCl(DMF)≈1.7 s−1; kCl(DMF/H2O)≈20 s−1]. The binuclear complex 3 with a proton responsive phenol unit is more active than the mononuclear complexes. In the presence of water, the observed rate constant kobs for 3 is four times higher than of 2, in the absence of water even ten times. Thus, the two metal centres are beneficial for catalysis. Lastly, the investigation showed that the phenol unit has no impact on the rate of the catalysis, it even slows down the CO2‐to‐CO conversion. This is due to an unproductive, competitive side reaction: After initial reduction, 1 and 3 loose either Cl− or undergo a reductive OH deprotonation forming a phenolate unit. The phenolate could bind to the metal centre blocking the sixth coordination site for CO2 activation. In DMF, O−H bond breaking and Cl− ion loss have similar rate constants [1: kCl(DMF)≈2 s−1, kOH≈1.5 s−1], in water/DMF Cl− loss is much faster. Thus, the effect on the catalytic rate is more pronounced in DMF. However, the acidic protons lower the overpotential of the catalysis by about 150 mV. Two is better than one! The impact of two metal centres and of a proton source in a α‐diimine Re(CO)3‐catalyst on the electrochemical CO2‐to‐CO conversion has been investigated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09476539
Volume :
25
Issue :
21
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Chemistry - A European Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
135850660
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.201806398