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1.
Inorg Chem ; 62(5): 1766-1775, 2023 Feb 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35699516

RESUMEN

Cofacial porphyrin catalysts for the Oxygen Reduction Reaction (ORR) formed via coordination-driven self-assembly have so far been limited to designs with fourfold symmetry, where four molecular clips bridge two porphyrin sites. We have synthesized six PynPhm (Py = pyridyl, Ph = phenyl) metalloporphyrin prisms (Co2+, Zn2+) bridged by molecular clips containing two Rh3+ centers. Four of these structures are lower symmetry, with the Py3Ph and Py2Ph2 prisms containing three and two molecular clips, respectively. The Co2+ species were evaluated for their ORR activity. Cyclic and hydrodynamic voltammetry studies of heterogeneous catalyst inks in aqueous media revealed marked differences in selectivity from ∼5% (Py3Ph) to ∼37% (Py2Ph2) for the formation of H2O2. The single-crystal X-ray structure of the Zn2 Py2Ph2 prism shows an offset between the porphyrin faces. This structural feature may be responsible for the change in selectivity, consistent with previous studies of covalently tethered cofacial porphyrins that have shown that geometry is a critical determinant of two-electron/two-proton versus four-electron/four-proton pathways. Extraction of standard rate constants ks for the ORR revealed a cofacial enhancement of ∼2 orders of magnitude over mononuclear Co2+ tetrapyridyl porphyrin. Even though all the prisms described here use the same molecular clip, the resultant structures, and thus the reactivity for the ORR, differ significantly based on the number and orientation of pyridyl donor groups on the porphyrins, highlighting how coordination-driven self-assembly can be used to rapidly tune dinuclear catalysts.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(2): 1098-1106, 2021 01 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33377787

RESUMEN

We assembled eight cofacial porphyrin prisms using MTPyP (M = Co(II) or Zn(II), TPyP = 4-tetrapyridylporphyrin) and functionalized ruthenium-based "molecular clips" using coordination-driven self-assembly. Our approach allows for the rapid synthesis of these architectures in isolated yields as high as 98% for the assembly step. Structural and reactivity studies provided a deeper understanding of the role of the building blocks on the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR). Catalytic efficacy was probed by using cyclic and hydrodynamic voltammetry on heterogeneous catalyst inks in aqueous media. The reported prisms showed outstanding selectivity (>98%) for the kinetically hindered 4e-/4H+ reduction of O2 to H2O over the kinetically more accessible 2e-/2H+ reduction to H2O2. Furthermore, we have demonstrated significant cofacial enhancement in the observed catalytic rate constant ks (∼5 orders of magnitude) over the mononuclear analogue. We conclude that the steric bulk of the clip plays an important role in the structural dynamics of these prisms, which in turn modulates the ORR reactivity with respect to selectivity and kinetics.

3.
Chemistry ; 24(43): 10984-10987, 2018 Aug 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29845658

RESUMEN

We report a suite of coordination-driven self-assembled prisms for heterogeneous electrocatalytic oxygen reduction (ORR) differing in the molecular clips linking two porphyrin faces in a cofacial arrangement. ORR activities and selectivities of monomeric CoTPyP along with cofacial prisms Ox-Co, Oxa-Co, and Benzo-Co were probed using cyclic voltammetry and rotating ring-disk techniques. All species were immobilized as heterogeneous catalysts on glassy carbon electrodes using a Nafion ink method. The selectivities of Ox-Co, Oxa-Co, and Benzo-Co prisms towards H2 O as determined by RRDE were 87, 97, and 75 %, respectively. The current density of the Oxa-Co plateaus at five times that of Pt/C when normalized per Co/Pt. The high synthetic yield (79 %), competitive overpotential (η ≈800 mV) and high selectivity (%H2 O ≈97 %) of the Oxa-Co highlights how self-assembly can be used to address multi-electron multi-proton transformations using polynuclear catalysts.

4.
Inorg Chem ; 57(7): 3587-3595, 2018 Apr 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29278500

RESUMEN

Ruthenium polypyridyl complexes are among the most studied molecular species for photochemical applications such as light-harvesting and photocatalysis, with [Ru(bpy)3]2+ (bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine) serving as an iconic example. We report the use of the [Ru(bpy)2]2+ fragment as a 90° acceptor tecton (M) in coordination-driven self-assembly to synthesize a M4L4 metallacycle (L = 4,4'-bipyridine) and a M6L4 truncated tetrahedral cage [L = 2,4,6-tris(4-pyridyl)-1,3,5-triazine]. The M6L4 cage possesses emergent properties attributed to its unique electronic structure, which results in increased visible-light absorption and an emission band that decays biexponentially with times of 3 and 790 ns. The presence of multiple ruthenium centers in the cage results in multiple RuIII/II reduction events, with a cathodic shift of the first reduction relative to that of [Ru(bpy)3]Cl2 (0.56 V vs 1.05 V). The ligand-centered reduction shifts anodically (-1.29 vs -1.64 V) versus the first bpy reduction observed in the parent [Ru(bpy)3]Cl2. The photophysical properties are explained by the existence of two localized charge-transfer states in the cage molecule: one that draws upon the bipyridine π* orbitals and the other upon the 2,4,6-tris(4-pyridyl)-1,3,5-triazine π* orbitals.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(4): 1424-1427, 2017 02 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28102678

RESUMEN

Herein we report the first study of the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) catalyzed by a cofacial porphyrin scaffold accessed in high yield (overall 53%) using coordination-driven self-assembly with no chromatographic purification steps. The ORR activity was investigated using chemical and electrochemical techniques on monomeric cobalt(II) tetra(meso-4-pyridyl)porphyrinate (CoTPyP) and its cofacial analogue [Ru8(η6-iPrC6H4Me)8(dhbq)4(CoTPyP)2][OTf]8 (Co Prism) (dhbq = 2,5-dihydroxy-1,4-benzoquinato, OTf = triflate) as homogeneous oxygen reduction catalysts. Co Prism is obtained in one self-assembly step that organizes six total building blocks, two CoTPyP units and four arene-Ru clips, into a cofacial motif previously demonstrated with free-base, Zn(II), and Ni(II) porphyrins. Turnover frequencies (TOFs) from chemical reduction (66 vs 6 h-1) and rate constants of overall homogeneous catalysis (kobs) determined from rotating ring-disk experiments (1.1 vs 0.05 h-1) establish a cofacial enhancement upon comparison of the activities of Co Prism and CoTPyP, respectively. Cyclic voltammetry was used to initially probe the electrochemical catalytic behavior. Rotating ring-disk electrode studies were completed to probe the Faradaic efficiency and obtain an estimate of the rate constant associated with the ORR.


Asunto(s)
Cobalto/química , Complejos de Coordinación/química , Oxígeno/química , Porfirinas/química , Catálisis , Técnicas Electroquímicas , Electrodos , Estructura Molecular , Oxidación-Reducción
6.
Dalton Trans ; 50(21): 7265-7276, 2021 Jun 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33954322

RESUMEN

Chemical intuition and well-known design principles can typically be used to create ligand environments in transition metal complexes to deliberately tune reactivity for desired applications. However, intelligent ligand design does not always result in the expected outcomes. Herein we report the synthesis and characterization of a tricarbonyl rhenium (2,2'-bipyridine) 4-pyridylamidine, Re(4-Pam), complex with unexpected photophysical properties. Photoluminescence kinetics of Re(4-Pam) undergoes non-exponential decay, which can be deconvolved into two emission lifetimes. However, upon protonation of the amidine functionality of the 4-pyridylamidine to form Re(4-PamH), a single exponential decay is observed. To understand and rationalize these experimental observations, density functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) are employed. The symmetry or asymmetry of the protonated or deprotonated 4-pyridylamidine ligand, respectively, is the key factor in switching between one and two photoluminescence lifetimes. Specifically, rotation of the dihedral angle formed between the bipyridine and 4-Pam ligand leads to two rotamers of Re(4-Pam) with degenerate triplet- to ground-state transitions.

7.
RSC Adv ; 10(25): 14804-14811, 2020 Apr 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35497176

RESUMEN

Herein, we report the thermodynamics, kinetics, and mechanism for electrochemical proton-coupled electron transfer involving the anthracene-based azo dye azo-OMe. The peak reduction potential of azo-OMe with organic acids spanning the pK a range of 2.6-23.51 shows a dependence upon the pK a of the acid when the acid pK a falls between 8 and 20 (in acetonitrile). A potential-pK a diagram is constructed and used to estimate the pK a of the azo-OMe species. Heterogeneous electron-transfer rate constants are obtained using rotating disk electrode voltammetry in combination with Koutecký-Levich and Tafel analysis. Electrochemical analysis shows that the reactions are diffusion limited and are kinetically controlled by the electron-transfer step. Kinetic isotope studies indicate a concerted proton, electron transfer event occurs in the pK a-dependent range when using trifluoroacetic acid.

8.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 55(42): 5874-5877, 2019 May 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31045183

RESUMEN

Herein, we report a new donor-acceptor system for photo-induced proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) that leverages an azo linkage as the proton-sensitive component and anthracene as a photo-trigger. Electrochemistry shows a change in the reduction potential with addition of acid. However, photochemistry is invariant to the absence or presence of acid. The anthracene and phenol/4-methoxyphenyl moieties of the azo dyes are highly conjugated, likely mitigating photo-induced charge transfer, despite sufficient driving force.

9.
Dalton Trans ; 48(23): 8488-8501, 2019 Jun 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31116199

RESUMEN

Three bodipy-based (BDP = 4,4-difluoro-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene) donor-acceptor dyads were designed and synthesized, and their ground-state and photophysical properties were systematically characterized. The electronic coupling between the BDP chromophore and an electron-donating carbazole (Carb) moiety was tuned by attachment via the meso and the beta positions on the BDP core, and through the use of various chemical linkers (phenyl and alkynyl) to afford mesoBDP-Carb, mesoBDP-phen-Carb, and betaBDP-alk-Carb. meso-Substituted dyads were found to retain ground-state absorption features of the unsubstituted BDP. However, variation of the linkage between the donor and acceptor moieties modulated the photophysical behavior of excited-state deactivation by controlling the rate of photoinduced internal charge transfer (ICT). The beta-substituted dyad dramatically tuned (red shifted) the absorption spectrum, while retaining desired features of the BDP, specifically stability and high extinction coefficients, however the ICT kinetics were accelerated compared to the meso-substituted dyads. Density functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent DFT (TDDFT) were carried out on the six potential dyads formed between BDP and Carb (attachment using the beta and meso positions for all three connections: direct, phenyl and alkynyl) to support the experimental observations. DFT and TDDFT showed molecular orbital density spread across the HOMO level only when attachment occurred through the beta position of BDP. In the meso-substituted BDP-Carb dyads, the molecular orbitals resembled those of the unsubstituted BDP. This work reveals several possible synthetic paradigms to tune photophysical properties with directed synthetic modifications and provides a mechanistic understanding of the ground- and excited- state behavior in these small-molecule donor-acceptor dyads.

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