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1.
Chem Rev ; 123(10): 6545-6611, 2023 May 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37184577

RESUMO

The modularity and synthetic flexibility of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have provoked analogies with enzymes, and even the term MOFzymes has been coined. In this review, we focus on molecular catalysis of energy relevance in MOFs, more specifically water oxidation, oxygen and carbon dioxide reduction, as well as hydrogen evolution in context of the MOF-enzyme analogy. Similar to enzymes, catalyst encapsulation in MOFs leads to structural stabilization under turnover conditions, while catalyst motifs that are synthetically out of reach in a homogeneous solution phase may be attainable as secondary building units in MOFs. Exploring the unique synthetic possibilities in MOFs, specific groups in the second and third coordination sphere around the catalytic active site have been incorporated to facilitate catalysis. A key difference between enzymes and MOFs is the fact that active site concentrations in the latter are often considerably higher, leading to charge and mass transport limitations in MOFs that are more severe than those in enzymes. High catalyst concentrations also put a limit on the distance between catalysts, and thus the available space for higher coordination sphere engineering. As transport is important for MOF-borne catalysis, a system perspective is chosen to highlight concepts that address the issue. A detailed section on transport and light-driven reactivity sets the stage for a concise review of the currently available literature on utilizing principles from Nature and system design for the preparation of catalytic MOF-based materials.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(22): 15648-15658, 2024 Jun 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38767460

RESUMO

The sunlight-driven reduction of CO2 into fuels and platform chemicals is a promising approach to enable a circular economy. However, established optimization approaches are poorly suited to multivariable multimetric photocatalytic systems because they aim to optimize one performance metric while sacrificing the others and thereby limit overall system performance. Herein, we address this multimetric challenge by defining a metric for holistic system performance that takes multiple figures of merit into account, and employ a machine learning algorithm to efficiently guide our experiments through the large parameter matrix to make holistic optimization accessible for human experimentalists. As a test platform, we employ a five-component system that self-assembles into photocatalytic micelles for CO2-to-CO reduction, which we experimentally optimized to simultaneously improve yield, quantum yield, turnover number, and frequency while maintaining high selectivity. Leveraging the data set with machine learning algorithms allows quantification of each parameter's effect on overall system performance. The buffer concentration is unexpectedly revealed as the dominating parameter for optimal photocatalytic activity, and is nearly four times more important than the catalyst concentration. The expanded use and standardization of this methodology to define and optimize holistic performance will accelerate progress in different areas of catalysis by providing unprecedented insights into performance bottlenecks, enhancing comparability, and taking results beyond comparison of subjective figures of merit.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 132(2): 028201, 2024 Jan 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38277585

RESUMO

We show here that soap films-typically expected to host symmetric molecular arrangements-can be constructed with differing opposite surfaces, breaking their symmetry, and making them reminiscent of functional biological motifs found in nature. Using fluorescent molecular probes as dopants on different sides of the film, resonance energy transfer could be employed to confirm the lack of symmetry, which was found to persist on timescales of several minutes. Further, a theoretical analysis of the main transport phenomena involved yielded good agreement with the experimental observations.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(34): 18687-18692, 2023 Aug 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37582183

RESUMO

Developing light-harvesting systems with efficient photoinduced charge separation and long-lived charge-separated (CS) state is desirable but still challenging. In this study, we designed a zinc porphyrin photosensitizer covalently linked with viologen (ZnP-V) that can be prepared into nanoparticles in aqueous solution. In DMF solution, the monomeric ZnP-V dyads show no electron transfer between the ZnP and viologen units. In contrast, the ZnP-V nanoparticles in aqueous solution show fast charge separation with a CS state lifetime of up to 4.3 ms. This can be attributed to charge hopping induced by aggregation or distance modification between the donor and acceptor induced by electronic interaction. Nevertheless, the lifetime of the CS state is orders of magnitude longer than for molecular aggregates reported previously. The ZnP-V nanoparticles show enhanced photocatalytic hydrogen production as compared to the ZnP nanoparticles and still hold promise for other applications such as photovoltaic devices and photoredox catalysis.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(20): 11067-11073, 2023 May 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37191461

RESUMO

Control of charge separation and recombination is critical for dye-sensitized solar cells and photoelectrochemical cells, and for p-type cells, the latter process limits their photovoltaic performance. We speculated that the lateral electron hopping between dyes on a p-type semiconductor surface can effectively separate electrons and holes in space and retard recombination. Thus, device designs where lateral electron hopping is promoted can lead to enhanced cell performance. Herein, we present an indirect proof by involving a second dye to monitor the effect of electron hopping after hole injection into the semiconductor. In mesoporous NiO films sensitized with peryleneimide (PMI) or naphthalene diimide (NDI) dyes, dye excitation led to ultrafast hole injection into NiO from either excited PMI* (τ < 200 fs) or NDI* (τ = 1.2 ps). In cosensitized films, surface electron transfer from PMI- to NDI was rapid (τ = 24 ps). Interestingly, the subsequent charge recombination (ps-µs) with NiO holes was much slower when NDI- was generated by electron transfer from PMI- than when NDI was excited directly. We therefore indicate that the charge recombination is slowed down after the charge hopping from the original PMI sites to the NDI sites. The experimental results supported our hypothesis and revealed important information on the charge carrier kinetics for the dye-sensitized NiO photoelectrode system.

6.
Inorg Chem ; 62(45): 18391-18398, 2023 Nov 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37853683

RESUMO

The light-driven activation of halophosphines R2PX (R = alkyl- or aryl, X = Cl, Br) by an IrIII-based photocatalyst is described. It is shown that initially formed secondary phosphines R2PH react readily with the remaining R2PX in a parent-child reaction to form diphosphines R2P-PR2. Aryl-containing diphosphines can be further reduced to secondary phosphines RAr2PH under identical photoredox conditions. Dihalophosphines RPX2 are also activated by the photoredox protocol, giving rise to unusual 3-, 4-, and 5-membered cyclophosphines. Transient absorption studies show that the excited state of the Ir photocatalyst is reductively quenched by the DIPEA (N,N-di-iso-propylethylamine) electron donor. Electron transfer to R2PX is however unexpectedly slow and cannot compete with recombination with the oxidized donor DIPEA•+. As DIPEA is not a perfectly reversible donor, a small proportion of the total IrII population escapes recombination, providing the reductant for the observed transformations.

7.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 25(4): 2935-2945, 2023 Jan 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36606387

RESUMO

Aqueous dispersed conjugated polymer dots (Pdots) have shown promising application in photocatalytic hydrogen evolution. To efficiently extract photogenerated charges from type-II heterojunction Pdots for hydrogen evolution, the mechanistic study of photophysical processes is essential for Pdot optimization. Within this work, we use a PFODTBT donor (D) polymer and an ITIC small molecule acceptor (A) as a donor/acceptor (D/A) model system to study their excited states and charge/energy transfer dynamics via steady-state and time-resolved photoluminescence spectroscopy, respectively. Charge-carrier generation and the recombination dynamics of binary Pdots with different D/A ratios were followed using femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. A significant spectral relaxation of photoluminescence was observed for individual D Pdots, implying an energetic disorder by nature. However, this was not seen for charge carriers in binary Pdots, probably due to the ultrafast charge generation process at an early time (<200 fs). The results showed slower charge recombination upon increasing the ratio of ITIC in binary Pdots, which further resulted in an enhanced photocatalytic hydrogen evolution, twice that as compared to individual D Pdots. Although binary Pdots prepared via the nanoprecipitation method exhibit a large interfacial area that allows high charge generation efficiencies, it also provides a high possibility for charge recombination and limits the further utilization of free charges. Therefore, for the future design of type-II heterojunction Pdots, suppressing the charge carrier recombination via increasing the crystallinity and proper phase segregation is necessary for enhanced photocatalytic hydrogen evolution.

8.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(16): 7308-7319, 2022 04 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35416654

RESUMO

Concerted electron-proton transfer (CEPT) reactions avoid charged intermediates and may be energetically favorable for redox and radical-transfer reactions in natural and synthetic systems. Tryptophan (W) often partakes in radical-transfer chains in nature but has been proposed to only undergo sequential electron transfer followed by proton transfer when water is the primary proton acceptor. Nevertheless, our group has shown that oxidation of freely solvated tyrosine and W often exhibit weakly pH-dependent proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) rate constants with moderate kinetic isotope effects (KIE ≈ 2-5), which could be associated with a CEPT mechanism. These results and conclusions have been questioned. Here, we present PCET rate constants for W derivatives with oxidized Ru- and Zn-porphyrin photosensitizers, extracted from laser flash-quench studies. Alternative quenching/photo-oxidation methods were used to avoid complications of previous studies, and both the amine and carboxylic acid groups of W were protected to make the indole the only deprotonable group. With a suitably tuned oxidant strength, we found an ET-limited reaction at pH < 4 and weakly pH-dependent rates at pH > ∼5 that are intrinsic to the PCET of the indole group with water (H2O) as the proton acceptor. The observed rate constants are up to more than 100 times higher than those measured for initial electron transfer, excluding the electron-first mechanism. Instead, the reaction can be attributed to CEPT. These conclusions are important for our view of CEPT in water and of PCET-mediated radical reactions with solvent-exposed tryptophan in natural systems.


Assuntos
Prótons , Triptofano , Transporte de Elétrons , Elétrons , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Indóis , Oxirredução , Triptofano/metabolismo , Água
9.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(42): 19353-19364, 2022 10 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36250745

RESUMO

Photosystem II, the natural water-oxidizing system, is a large protein complex embedded in a phospholipid membrane. A much simpler system for photocatalytic water oxidation consists of liposomes functionalized with amphiphilic ruthenium(II)-tris-bipyridine photosensitizer (PS) and 6,6'-dicarboxylato-2,2'-bipyridine-ruthenium(II) catalysts (Cat) with a water-soluble sacrificial electron acceptor (Na2S2O8). However, the effect of embedding this photocatalytic system in liposome membranes on the mechanism of photocatalytic water oxidation was not well understood. Here, several phenomena have been identified by spectroscopic tools, which explain the drastically different kinetics of water photo-oxidizing liposomes, compared with analogous homogeneous systems. First, the oxidative quenching of photoexcited PS* by S2O82- at the liposome surface occurs solely via static quenching, while dynamic quenching is observed for the homogeneous system. Moreover, the charge separation efficiency after the quenching reaction is much smaller than unity, in contrast to the quantitative generation of PS+ in homogeneous solution. In parallel, the high local concentration of the membrane-bound PS induces self-quenching at 10:1-40:1 molar lipid-PS ratios. Finally, while the hole transfer from PS+ to catalyst is rather fast in homogeneous solution (kobs > 1 × 104 s-1 at [catalyst] > 50 µM), in liposomes at pH = 4, the reaction is rather slow (kobs ≈ 17 s-1 for 5 µM catalyst in 100 µM DMPC lipid). Overall, the better understanding of these productive and unproductive pathways explains what limits the rate of photocatalytic water oxidation in liposomal vs homogeneous systems, which is required for future optimization of light-driven catalysis within self-assembled lipid interfaces.


Assuntos
Rutênio , Água , Água/química , Bicamadas Lipídicas , Rutênio/química , Lipossomos , Fármacos Fotossensibilizantes/química , 2,2'-Dipiridil , Complexo de Proteína do Fotossistema II , Dimiristoilfosfatidilcolina , Oxirredução
10.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(21): 9399-9412, 2022 06 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35594410

RESUMO

Light-driven conversion of CO2 to chemicals provides a sustainable alternative to fossil fuels, but homogeneous systems are typically limited by cross reactivity between different redox half reactions and inefficient charge separation. Herein, we present the bioinspired development of amphiphilic photosensitizer and catalyst pairs that self-assemble in lipid membranes to overcome some of these limitations and enable photocatalytic CO2 reduction in liposomes using precious metal-free catalysts. Using sodium ascorbate as a sacrificial electron source, a membrane-anchored alkylated cobalt porphyrin demonstrates higher catalytic CO production (1456 vs 312 turnovers) and selectivity (77 vs 11%) compared to its water-soluble nonalkylated counterpart. Time-resolved and steady-state spectroscopy revealed that self-assembly facilitates this performance enhancement by enabling a charge-separation state lifetime increase of up to two orders of magnitude in the dye while allowing for a ninefold faster electron transfer to the catalyst. Spectroelectrochemistry and density functional theory calculations of the alkylated Co porphyrin catalyst support a four-electron-charging mechanism that activates the catalyst prior to catalysis, together with key catalytic intermediates. Our molecular liposome system therefore benefits from membrane immobilization and provides a versatile and efficient platform for photocatalysis.


Assuntos
Lipossomos , Porfirinas , Dióxido de Carbono/química , Catálise , Elétrons
11.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(8): 3614-3625, 2022 03 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35184564

RESUMO

With the price-competitiveness of solar and wind power, hydrogen technologies may be game changers for a cleaner, defossilized, and sustainable energy future. H2 can indeed be produced in electrolyzers from water, stored for long periods, and converted back into power, on demand, in fuel cells. The feasibility of the latter process critically depends on the discovery of cheap and efficient catalysts able to replace platinum group metals at the anode and cathode of fuel cells. Bioinspiration can be key for designing such alternative catalysts. Here we show that a novel class of iron-based catalysts inspired from the active site of [FeFe]-hydrogenase behave as unprecedented bidirectional electrocatalysts for interconverting H2 and protons efficiently under near-neutral aqueous conditions. Such bioinspired catalysts have been implemented at the anode of a functional membrane-less H2/O2 fuel cell device.


Assuntos
Hidrogenase , Proteínas Ferro-Enxofre , Catálise , Domínio Catalítico , Hidrogênio/química , Hidrogenase/química , Proteínas Ferro-Enxofre/química , Prótons , Água
12.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(48): 29850-29861, 2022 Dec 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36468421

RESUMO

To gain a deeper understanding of the underlying charge processes in dye sensitized photocathodes, lateral electron hopping across dye-sensitized NiO photocathodes was investigated. For dye-sensitized systems, hole hopping across photoanodes has been studied extensively in the literature but no expansive studies on electron hopping in sensitized photocathodes exist today. Therefore, an organic p-type dye (TIP) with donor-linker-acceptor design, showing high stability and electrochemical reversibility, was used to study the electron transfer dynamics (electron-hopping) between dyes with temperature dependent spectroelectrochemistry and computational simulations. Besides intermolecular electron-hopping across the surface with a rate constant in the order of 105 s-1, our results show a second electron hopping pathway between NiO surface states with a rate constant in the order of 107 s-1, which precedes the electron hopping between the dyes. Upon application of a potential step negative enough to reduce both the dye and NiO surface states, the majority of NiO surface states need to be reduced before intermolecular electron transfer can take place. The results indicate that, in contrast to sensitized photoanodes where intermolecular charge transfer is known to influence recombination kinetics, intermolecular charge transport processes in TIP dye sensitized NiO photocathodes is less relevant because the fast electron transport between NiO surface states likely dominates recombination kinetics.

13.
Chem Soc Rev ; 50(8): 4833-4855, 2021 Apr 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33659967

RESUMO

Artificial photosynthesis has experienced rapid developments aimed at producing photocatalytic systems for the synthesis of chemical energy carriers. Conceptual advances of solar fuel systems have been inspired by improved understanding of natural photosynthesis and its key operational principles: (a) light harvesting, (b) charge separation, (c) directional proton and electron transport between reaction centres and across membranes, (d) water oxidation and (e) proton or CO2 reduction catalysis. Recently, there has been a surge of bio-inspired photosynthetic assemblies that use liposomes as nanocompartments to confine reaction spaces and enable vectorial charge transport across membranes. This approach, already investigated in the 1980s, offers in principle a promising platform for solar fuel synthesis. However, the fundamental principles governing the supramolecular assemblies of lipids and photoactive surfactant-like molecules in membranes, are intricate, and mastering membrane-supported photochemistry requires thorough understanding of the science behind liposomes. In this review, we provide an overview of approaches and considerations to construct a (semi)artificial liposome for solar fuel production. Key features to consider for the use of liposomes in solar fuel synthesis are highlighted, including the understanding of the orientation and binding of different components along the membrane, the controlled electron transport between the reaction centres, and the generation of proton gradients as driving force. Together with a list of experimental techniques for the characterisation of photoactive liposomes, this article provides the reader with a roadmap towards photocatalytic fuel production at the interface of lipid membranes and aqueous media.


Assuntos
Bicamadas Lipídicas/metabolismo , Lipossomos/metabolismo , Energia Solar , Água/metabolismo , Bicamadas Lipídicas/química , Lipossomos/química , Água/química
14.
Nano Lett ; 21(13): 5813-5818, 2021 07 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34132552

RESUMO

Interaction of surface adsorbate vibration and intraband electron absorption in nanocrystals has been reported to affect the photophysical properties of both nanocrystals and surface adsorbates and may affect the performance of hybrid photocatalysts composed of semiconductor nanocrystals and molecular catalysts. Here, by combining ultrafast transient visible and IR spectroscopic measurements, we report the observation of Fano resonances between the intraband transition of the photogenerated electrons in CdS and CdSe nanocrystals and CO stretching vibrational modes of adsorbed molecular catalysts, [Fe2(cbdt)(CO)6] (FeFe; cbdt = 1-carboxyl-benzene-2,3-dithiolate), a molecular mimic for the active site of FeFe-hydrogenase. The occurrence of Fano resonances is independent of nanocrystal types (rods vs dots) or charge transfer character between the nanocrystal and FeFe, and is likely a general feature of nanocrystal and molecular catalyst hybrid systems. These results provide new insights into the fundamental interactions in these hybrid assemblies for artificial photosynthesis.


Assuntos
Nanopartículas , Pontos Quânticos , Catálise , Elétrons , Vibração
15.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(2): 560-576, 2021 01 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33405896

RESUMO

Proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactions are fundamental to energy transformation reactions in natural and artificial systems and are increasingly recognized in areas such as catalysis and synthetic chemistry. The interdependence of proton and electron transfer brings a mechanistic richness of reactivity, including various sequential and concerted mechanisms. Delineating between different PCET mechanisms and understanding why a particular mechanism dominates are crucial for the design and optimization of reactions that use PCET. This Perspective provides practical guidelines for how to discern between sequential and concerted mechanisms based on interpretations of thermodynamic data with temperature-, pressure-, and isotope-dependent kinetics. We present new PCET-zone diagrams that show how a mechanism can switch or even be eliminated by varying the thermodynamic (ΔGPT° and ΔGET°) and coupling strengths for a PCET system. We discuss the appropriateness of asynchronous concerted PCET to rationalize observations in organic reactions, and the distinction between hydrogen atom transfer and other concerted PCET reactions. Contemporary issues and future prospects in PCET research are discussed.

16.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(7): 2875-2885, 2021 Feb 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33541077

RESUMO

Panchromatic ternary polymer dots (Pdots) consisting of two conjugated polymers (PFBT and PFODTBT) based on fluorene and benzothiadiazole groups, and one small molecular acceptor (ITIC) have been prepared and assessed for photocatalytic hydrogen production with the assistance of a Pt cocatalyst. Femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopic studies of the ternary Pdots have revealed both energy and charge transfer processes that occur on the time scale of sub-picosecond between the different components. They result in photogenerated electrons being located mainly at ITIC, which acts as both electron and energy acceptor. Results from cryo-transmission electron microscopy suggest that ITIC forms crystalline phases in the ternary Pdots, facilitating electron transfer from ITIC to the Pt cocatalyst and promoting the final photocatalytic reaction yield. Enhanced light absorption, efficient charge separation, and the ideal morphology of the ternary Pdots have rendered an external quantum efficiency up to 7% at 600 nm. Moreover, the system has shown a high stability over 120 h without obvious degradation of the photocatalysts.

17.
Chemistry ; 27(68): 16966-16977, 2021 Dec 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34137473

RESUMO

Heterogenized photoredox catalysts provide a path for sustainable chemical synthesis using highly tunable, reusable constructs. Here, heterogenized iridium complexes as photoredox catalysts were assembled via covalent attachment to metal oxide surfaces (ITO, ZrO2 , Al2 O3 ) in thin film or nanopowder constructs. The goal was to understand which materials provided the most promising constructs for catalysis. To do this, reductive dehalogenation of bromoacetophenone to acetophenone was studied as a test reaction for system optimization. All catalyst constructs produced acetophenone with high conversions and yields with the fastest reactions complete in fifteen minutes using Al2 O3 supports. The nanopowder catalysts resulted in faster and more efficient catalysis, while the thin film catalysts were more robust and easily reused. Importantly, the thin film constructs show promise for future photoelectrochemical and electrochemical photoredox setups. Finally, all catalysts were reusable 2-3 times, performing at least 1000 turnovers (Al2 O3 ), demonstrating that heterogenized catalysts are a sustainable catalyst alternative.

18.
J Phys Chem A ; 125(35): 7670-7684, 2021 Sep 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34432465

RESUMO

Concerted proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) in the Marcus inverted region was recently demonstrated (Science 2019, 364, 471-475). Understanding the requirements for such reactivity is fundamentally important and holds promise as a design principle for solar energy conversion systems. Herein, we investigate the solvent polarity and temperature dependence of photoinduced proton-coupled charge separation (CS) and charge recombination (CR) in anthracene-phenol-pyridine triads: 1 (10-(4-hydroxy-3-(4-methylpyridin-2-yl)benzyl)anthracene-9-carbonitrile) and 2 (10-(4-hydroxy-3-(4-methoxypyridin-2-yl)benzyl)anthracene-9-carbonitrile). Both the CS and CR rate constants increased with increasing polarity in acetonitrile:n-butyronitrile mixtures. The kinetics were semi-quantitatively analyzed where changes in dielectric and refractive index, and thus consequently changes in driving force (-ΔG°) and reorganization energy (λ), were accounted for. The results were further validated by fitting the temperature dependence, from 180 to 298 K, in n-butyronitrile. The analyses support previous computational work where transitions to proton vibrational excited states dominate the CR reaction with a distinct activation free energy (ΔG*CR ∼ 140 meV). However, the solvent continuum model fails to accurately describe the changes in ΔG° and λ with temperature via changes in dielectric constant and refractive index. Satisfactory modeling was obtained using the results of a molecular solvent model [J. Phys. Chem. B 1999, 103, 9130-9140], which predicts that λ decreases with temperature, opposite to that of the continuum model. To further assess the solvent polarity control in the inverted region, the reactions were studied in toluene. Nonpolar solvents decrease both ΔG°CR and λ, slowing CR into the nanosecond time regime for 2 in toluene at 298 K. This demonstrates how PCET in the inverted region may be controlled to potentially use proton-coupled CS states for efficient solar fuel production and photoredox catalysis.

19.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(43): 18668-18678, 2020 Oct 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33063996

RESUMO

Surface states of mesoporous NiO semiconductor films have particular properties differing from the bulk and are able to dramatically influence the interfacial electron transfer and adsorption of chemical species. To achieve a better performance of NiO-based p-type dye-sensitized solar cells (p-DSCs), the function of the surface states has to be understood. In this paper, we applied a modified atomic layer deposition procedure that is able to passivate 72% of the surface states on NiO by depositing a monolayer of Al2O3. This provides us with representative control samples to study the functions of the surface states on NiO films. A main conclusion is that surface states, rather than the bulk, are mainly responsible for the conductivity in mesoporous NiO films. Furthermore, surface states significantly affect dye regeneration (with I-/I3- as redox couple) and hole transport in NiO-based p-DSCs. A new dye regeneration mechanism is proposed in which electrons are transferred from reduced dye molecules to intra-bandgap states, and then to I3- species. The intra-bandgap states here act as catalysts to assist I3- reduction. A more complete mechanism is suggested to understand the particular hole transport behavior in p-DSCs, in which the hole transport time is independent of light intensity. This is ascribed to the percolation hole hopping on the surface states. When the concentration of surface states was significantly reduced, the light-independent charge transport behavior in pristine NiO-based p-DSCs transformed into having an exponential dependence on light intensity, similar to that observed in TiO2-based n-type DSCs. These conclusions on the function of surface states provide new insight into the electronic properties of mesoporous NiO films.

20.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(26): 11550-11559, 2020 07 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32479070

RESUMO

Proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) from tyrosine produces a neutral tyrosyl radical (Y•) that is vital to many catalytic redox reactions. To better understand how the protein environment influences the PCET properties of tyrosine, we have studied the radical formation behavior of Y32 in the α3Y model protein. The previously solved α3Y solution NMR structure shows that Y32 is sequestered ∼7.7 ± 0.3 Å below the protein surface without any primary proton acceptors nearby. Here we present transient absorption kinetic data and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to resolve the PCET mechanism associated with Y32 oxidation. Y32• was generated in a bimolecular reaction with [Ru(bpy)3]3+ formed by flash photolysis. At pH > 8, the rate constant of Y32• formation (kPCET) increases by one order of magnitude per pH unit, corresponding to a proton-first mechanism via tyrosinate (PTET). At lower pH < 7.5, the pH dependence is weak and shows a previously measured KIE ≈ 2.5, which best fits a concerted mechanism. kPCET is independent of phosphate buffer concentration at pH 6.5. This provides clear evidence that phosphate buffer is not the primary proton acceptor. MD simulations show that one to two water molecules can enter the hydrophobic cavity of α3Y and hydrogen bond to Y32, as well as the possibility of hydrogen-bonding interactions between Y32 and E13, through structural fluctuations that reorient surrounding side chains. Our results illustrate how protein conformational motions can influence the redox reactivity of a tyrosine residue and how PCET mechanisms can be tuned by changing the pH even when the PCET occurs within the interior of a protein.


Assuntos
Proteínas/química , Prótons , Tirosina/química , Transporte de Elétrons , Ligação de Hidrogênio , Concentração de Íons de Hidrogênio , Cinética , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Oxirredução
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