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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(17): 6482-6490, 2021 05 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33891414

RESUMEN

In hydrogen production, the anodic oxygen evolution reaction (OER) limits the energy conversion efficiency and also impacts stability in proton-exchange membrane water electrolyzers. Widely used Ir-based catalysts suffer from insufficient activity, while more active Ru-based catalysts tend to dissolve under OER conditions. This has been associated with the participation of lattice oxygen (lattice oxygen oxidation mechanism (LOM)), which may lead to the collapse of the crystal structure and accelerate the leaching of active Ru species, leading to low operating stability. Here we develop Sr-Ru-Ir ternary oxide electrocatalysts that achieve high OER activity and stability in acidic electrolyte. The catalysts achieve an overpotential of 190 mV at 10 mA cm-2 and the overpotential remains below 225 mV following 1,500 h of operation. X-ray absorption spectroscopy and 18O isotope-labeled online mass spectroscopy studies reveal that the participation of lattice oxygen during OER was suppressed by interactions in the Ru-O-Ir local structure, offering a picture of how stability was improved. The electronic structure of active Ru sites was modulated by Sr and Ir, optimizing the binding energetics of OER oxo-intermediates.

2.
Chem Sci ; 10(35): 8256-8261, 2019 Sep 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31859689

RESUMEN

The air-water interface serves as a crucial site for numerous chemical and physical processes in environmental science and engineering, such as cloud chemistry, ocean-atmosphere exchange, and wastewater treatment. The development of "surface-selective" techniques for probing interfacial properties of water therefore lies at the forefront of research in chemical science. Recently, researchers have adapted electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESIMS) to generate microdroplets of water to investigate interfacial phenomena at thermodynamic equilibrium. In contrast, using a broad set of experimental and theoretical techniques, we found that electrosprays of water could facilitate partially hydrated (gas-phase) ions (e.g., H3O+·(H2O)2) to drive/catalyze chemical reactions that are otherwise not possible to accomplish by purely interfacial effects (e.g., enhanced water-hydrophobe surface area) (Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, 2566). Thus, techniques exploiting electrosprays of water cannot be relied upon as generalized surface-selective platforms. Here, we respond to the comments raised by Colussi & Enami (Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, DOI: ; 10.1039/c9sc00991d) on our paper.

3.
Chem Sci ; 10(9): 2566-2577, 2019 Mar 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30996971

RESUMEN

The recent application of electrosprays to characterize the air-water interface, along with the reports on dramatically accelerated chemical reactions in aqueous electrosprays, have sparked a broad interest. Herein, we report on complementary laboratory and in silico experiments tracking the oligomerization of isoprene, an important biogenic gas, in electrosprays and isoprene-water emulsions to differentiate the contributions of interfacial effects from those of high voltages leading to charge-separation and concentration of reactants in the electrosprays. To this end, we employed electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, proton nuclear magnetic resonance, ab initio calculations and molecular dynamics simulations. We found that the oligomerization of isoprene in aqueous electrosprays involved minimally hydrated and highly reactive hydronium ions. Those conditions, however, are non-existent at pristine air-water interfaces and oil-water emulsions under normal temperature and pressure. Thus, electrosprays should be complemented with surface-specific platforms and theoretical methods to reliably investigate chemistries at the pristine air-water interface.

4.
Inorg Chem ; 58(4): 2336-2345, 2019 Feb 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30730725

RESUMEN

The modulation of the reactivity of metal oxo species by redox inactive metals has attracted much interest due to the observation of redox inactive metal effects on processes involving electron transfer both in nature (the oxygen-evolving complex of Photosystem II) and in heterogeneous catalysis (mixed-metal oxides). Studies of small-molecule models of these systems have revealed numerous instances of effects of redox inactive metals on electron- and group-transfer reactivity. However, the heterometallic species directly involved in these transformations have rarely been structurally characterized and are often generated in situ. We have previously reported the preparation and structural characterization of multiple series of heterometallic clusters based on Mn3 and Fe3 cores and described the effects of Lewis acidity of the heterometal incorporated in these complexes on cluster reduction potential. To determine the effects of Lewis acidity of redox inactive metals on group transfer reactivity in structurally well-defined complexes, we studied [Mn3MO4], [Mn3MO(OH)], and [Fe3MO(OH)] clusters in oxygen atom transfer (OAT) reactions with phosphine substrates. The qualitative rate of OAT correlates with the Lewis acidity of the redox inactive metal, confirming that Lewis acidic metal centers can affect the chemical reactivity of metal oxo species by modulating cluster electronics.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(48): 16773-16782, 2018 Dec 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30406657

RESUMEN

We develop the grand canonical potential kinetics (GCP-K) formulation based on thermodynamics from quantum mechanics calculations to provide a fundamental basis for understanding heterogeneous electrochemical reactions. Our GCP-K formulation arises naturally from minimizing the free energy using a Legendre transform relating the net charge of the system and the applied voltage. Performing this macroscopic transformation explicitly allows us to make the connection of GCP-K to the traditional Butler-Volmer kinetics. Using this GCP-K based free energy, we show how to predict both the potential and pH dependent chemistry for a specific example, the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) at a sulfur vacancy on the basal plane of MoS2. We find that the rate-determining steps in both acidic and basic conditions are the Volmer reaction in which the second hydrogen atom is adsorbed from the solution. Using the GCP-K formulation, we show that the stretched bond distances change continuously as a function of the applied potential. This shows that the main reason for the higher activity in basic conditions is that the transition state is closer to the product, which leads to a more favorable Tafel slope of 60 mV/dec. In contrast if the transition state were closer to the reactant, where the transfer coefficient is less than 0.5 we would obtain a Tafel slope of almost 150 mV/dec. Based on this detailed understanding of the reaction mechanism, we conclude that the second hydrogen at the chalcogenide vacant site is the most active toward the hydrogen evolution reaction. Using this as a descriptor, we compare it to the other 2H group VI metal dichalcogenides and predict that vacancies on MoTe2 will have the best performance toward HER.

6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(49): 17007-17018, 2018 12 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30495938

RESUMEN

Alkyl and alkenyl arenes are used in a wide range of products. However, the synthesis of 1-phenylalkanes or their alkenyl variants from arenes and alkenes is not accessible with current commercial acid-based catalytic processes. Here, it is reported that an air-stable Rh(I) complex, (5-FP)Rh(TFA)(η2-C2H4) (5-FP = 1,2-bis( N-7-azaindolyl)benzene; TFA = trifluoroacetate), serves as a catalyst precursor for the oxidative conversion of arenes and alkenes to alkenyl arenes that are precursors to 1-phenylalkanes upon hydrogenation. It has been demonstrated that coordination of the 5-FP ligand enhances catalyst longevity compared to unligated Rh(I) catalyst precursors, and the 5-FP-ligated catalyst permits in situ recycling of the Cu(II) oxidant using air. The 5-FP ligand provides a Rh catalyst that can maintain activity for arene alkenylation over at least 2 weeks in reactions at 150 °C that involve multiple Cu(II) regeneration steps using air. Conditions to achieve >13 000 catalytic turnovers with an 8:1 linear:branched (L:B) ratio have been demonstrated. In addition, the catalyst is active under aerobic conditions using air as the sole oxidant. At 80 °C, an 18:1 L:B ratio of alkenyl arenes has been observed, but the reaction rate is substantially reduced compared to 150 °C. Quantum mechanics (QM) calculations compare two predicted reaction pathways with the experimental data, showing that an oxidative addition/reductive elimination pathway is energetically favored over a pathway that involves C-H activation by concerted metalation-deprotonation. In addition, our QM computations are consistent with the observed selectivity (11:1) for linear alkenyl arene products.

7.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(20): 6288-6297, 2018 05 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29701965

RESUMEN

The Haber-Bosch industrial process for synthesis of ammonia (NH3) from hydrogen and nitrogen produces the millions of tons of ammonia gas annually needed to produce nitrates for fertilizers required to feed the earth's growing populations. This process has been optimized extensively, but it still uses enormous amounts of energy (2% of the world's supply), making it essential to dramatically improve its efficiency. To provide guidelines to accelerate this improvement, we used quantum mechanics to predict reaction mechanisms and kinetics for NH3 synthesis on Fe(111)-the best Fe single crystal surface for NH3 synthesis. We predicted the free energies of all reaction barriers for all steps in the mechanism and built these results into a kinetic Monte Carlo model for predicting steady state catalytic rates to compare with single-crystal experiments at 673 K and 20 atm. We find excellent agreement with a predicted turnover frequency (TOF) of 17.7 s-1 per 2 × 2 site (5.3 × 10-9 mol/cm2/sec) compared to TOF = 10 s-1 per site from experiment.

8.
Dalton Trans ; 46(37): 12507-12515, 2017 Sep 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28901363

RESUMEN

Density functional theory (DFT, B3LYP-D3 with implicit solvation in toluene) was used to investigate the mechanisms of olefin hydrosilylation catalyzed by PDI(Fe) (bis(imino)pyridine iron) complexes, where PDI = 2,6-(ArN[double bond, length as m-dash]CMe)2(C5H3N) with Ar = 2,6-R2-C6H3. We find that the rate-determining step for hydrosilylation is hydride migration from Et3SiH onto the Fe-bound olefin to form (PDI)Fe(alkyl)(SiEt3). This differs from the mechanism for the Pt Karstedt catalyst in that there is no prior Si-H oxidative addition onto the Fe center. (PDI)Fe(alkyl)(SiEt3) then undergoes C-Si reductive elimination to form (PDI)Fe, which coordinates an olefin ligand to regenerate the resting state (PDI)Fe(olefin). In agreement with experimental observations, we found that anti-Markovnikov hydride migration has a 5.1 kcal mol-1 lower activation enthalpy than Markovnikov migration. This system has an unusual anti-ferromagnetic coupling between high spin electrons on the Fe center and the unpaired spin in the pi system of the non-innocent redox-active PDI ligand. To describe this with DFT, we used the "broken-symmetry" approach to establish the ground electronic and spin state of intermediates and transition states over the proposed catalytic cycles.

9.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(1): 149-155, 2017 01 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27936679

RESUMEN

How to efficiently oxidize H2O to O2 (oxygen evolution reaction, OER) in photoelectrochemical cells (PEC) is a great challenge due to its complex charge transfer process, high overpotential, and corrosion. So far no OER mechanism has been fully explained atomistically with both thermodynamic and kinetics. IrO2 is the only known OER catalyst with both high catalytic activity and stability in acidic conditions. This is important because PEC experiments often operate at extreme pH conditions. In this work, we performed first-principles calculations integrated with implicit solvation at constant potentials to examine the detailed atomistic reaction mechanism of OER at the IrO2 (110) surface. We determined the surface phase diagram, explored the possible reaction pathways including kinetic barriers, and computed reaction rates based on the microkinetic models. This allowed us to resolve several long-standing puzzles about the atomistic OER mechanism.

10.
Nat Commun ; 7: 12765, 2016 09 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27633712

RESUMEN

With the massive consumption of fossil fuels and its detrimental impact on the environment, methods of generating clean power are urgent. Hydrogen is an ideal carrier for renewable energy; however, hydrogen generation is inefficient because of the lack of robust catalysts that are substantially cheaper than platinum. Therefore, robust and durable earth-abundant and cost-effective catalysts are desirable for hydrogen generation from water splitting via hydrogen evolution reaction. Here we report an active and durable earth-abundant transition metal dichalcogenide-based hybrid catalyst that exhibits high hydrogen evolution activity approaching the state-of-the-art platinum catalysts, and superior to those of most transition metal dichalcogenides (molybdenum sulfide, cobalt diselenide and so on). Our material is fabricated by growing ternary molybdenum sulfoselenide particles on self-standing porous nickel diselenide foam. This advance provides a different pathway to design cheap, efficient and sizable hydrogen-evolving electrode by simultaneously tuning the number of catalytic edge sites, porosity, heteroatom doping and electrical conductivity.

11.
J Am Chem Soc ; 137(20): 6692-8, 2015 May 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25941943

RESUMEN

We report density functional theory (M06L) calculations including Poisson-Boltzmann solvation to determine the reaction pathways and barriers for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) on MoS2, using both a periodic two-dimensional slab and a Mo10S21 cluster model. We find that the HER mechanism involves protonation of the electron rich molybdenum hydride site (Volmer-Heyrovsky mechanism), leading to a calculated free energy barrier of 17.9 kcal/mol, in good agreement with the barrier of 19.9 kcal/mol estimated from the experimental turnover frequency. Hydronium protonation of the hydride on the Mo site is 21.3 kcal/mol more favorable than protonation of the hydrogen on the S site because the electrons localized on the Mo-H bond are readily transferred to form dihydrogen with hydronium. We predict the Volmer-Tafel mechanism in which hydrogen atoms bound to molybdenum and sulfur sites recombine to form H2 has a barrier of 22.6 kcal/mol. Starting with hydrogen atoms on adjacent sulfur atoms, the Volmer-Tafel mechanism goes instead through the M-H + S-H pathway. In discussions of metal chalcogenide HER catalysis, the S-H bond energy has been proposed as the critical parameter. However, we find that the sulfur-hydrogen species is not an important intermediate since the free energy of this species does not play a direct role in determining the effective activation barrier. Rather we suggest that the kinetic barrier should be used as a descriptor for reactivity, rather than the equilibrium thermodynamics. This is supported by the agreement between the calculated barrier and the experimental turnover frequency. These results suggest that to design a more reactive catalyst from edge exposed MoS2, one should focus on lowering the reaction barrier between the metal hydride and a proton from the hydronium in solution.

12.
Chemistry ; 21(3): 1286-93, 2015 Jan 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25418788

RESUMEN

A series of rhodium(III) bis(quinolinyl)benzene (bisq(x)) complexes was studied as candidates for the homogeneous partial oxidation of methane. Density functional theory (DFT) (M06 with Poisson continuum solvation) was used to investigate a variety of (bisq(x)) ligand candidates involving different functional groups to determine the impact on Rh(III)(bisq(x))-catalyzed methane functionalization. The free energy activation barriers for methane C-H activation and Rh-methyl functionalization at 298 K and 498 K were determined. DFT studies predict that the best candidate for catalytic methane functionalization is Rh(III) coordinated to unsubstituted bis(quinolinyl)benzene (bisq). Support is also found for the prediction that the η(2)-benzene coordination mode of (bisq(x)) ligands on Rh encourages methyl group functionalization by serving as an effective leaving group for SN2 and SR2 attack.

13.
Inorg Chem ; 53(24): 13031-41, 2014 Dec 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25470690

RESUMEN

The preparation and characterization of a series of isostructural cobalt complexes [Co(t-Bu)2P(E)Py(E)P(t-Bu)2(CH3CN)2][BF4]2 (Py = pyridine, E = CH2, NH, O, and X = BF4 (1a-c)) and the corresponding one-electron reduced analogues [Co(t-Bu)2P(E)Py(E)P(t-Bu)2(CH3CN)2][BF4]2 (2a-c) are reported. The reactivity of the reduced cobalt complexes with CO2, CO, and H(+) to generate intermediates in a CO2 to CO and H2O reduction cycle are described. The reduction of 1a-c and subsequent reactivity with CO2 was investigated by cyclic voltammetry, and for 1a also by infrared spectroelectrochemistry. The corresponding CO complexes of (2a-c) were prepared, and the Co-CO bond strengths were characterized by IR spectroscopy. Quantum mechanical methods (B3LYP-d3 with solvation) were used to characterize the competitive reactivity of the reduced cobalt centers with H(+) versus CO2. By investigating a series of isostructural complexes, correlations in reactivity with ligand electron withdrawing effects are made.

14.
J Am Chem Soc ; 136(42): 14690-3, 2014 Oct 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25303016

RESUMEN

Traditional C-H bond activation by a concerted metalation-deprotonation (CMD) mechanism involves precoordination of the C-H bond followed by deprotonation from an internal base. Reported herein is a "through-arene" activation of an uncoordinated benzylic C-H bond that is 6 bonds away from a Rh(III) ion. The mechanism, which was investigated by experimental and DFT studies, proceeds through a dearomatized xylene intermediate. This intermediate was observed spectroscopically upon addition of a pyridine base to provide a thermodynamic trap.

15.
J Am Chem Soc ; 136(41): 14373-6, 2014 Oct 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25241826

RESUMEN

Synthetic model compounds have been targeted to benchmark and better understand the electronic structure, geometry, spectroscopy, and reactivity of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) of photosystem II, a low-symmetry Mn4CaOn cluster. Herein, low-symmetry Mn(IV)3GdO4 and Mn(IV)3CaO4 cubanes are synthesized in a rational, stepwise fashion through desymmetrization by ligand substitution, causing significant cubane distortions. As a result of increased electron richness and desymmetrization, a specific µ3-oxo moiety of the Mn3CaO4 unit becomes more basic allowing for selective protonation. Coordination of a fifth metal ion, Ag(+), to the same site gives a Mn3CaAgO4 cluster that models the topology of the OEC by displaying both a cubane motif and a "dangler" transition metal. The present synthetic strategy provides a rational roadmap for accessing more accurate models of the biological catalyst.


Asunto(s)
Calcio/química , Manganeso/química , Oxígeno/química , Complejo de Proteína del Fotosistema II/química , Calcio/metabolismo , Electrones , Ligandos , Manganeso/metabolismo , Modelos Moleculares , Estructura Molecular , Oxígeno/metabolismo , Complejo de Proteína del Fotosistema II/metabolismo
16.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 50(75): 10994-6, 2014 Sep 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25096926

RESUMEN

A new mechanism for generating C-O bonds from metal-hydrocarbyls involving homolytic, intermolecular migration of the hydrocarbyl group to a vanadium oxo is reported. Responsible for the C-O bond in phenol formed by the reaction of OVCl3 with HgPh2, it may provide air-regenerable metal oxos a role in aerobic alkane oxidations.

17.
J Am Chem Soc ; 136(12): 4761-8, 2014 Mar 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24597998

RESUMEN

The mechanism of oxidation by O2 of (dpms)Pt(II)Me(OH2) (1) and (dpms)Pt(II)Me(OH)(-) (2) [dpms = di(2-pyridyl)methanesulfonate] in water in the pH range of 4-14 at 21 °C was explored using kinetic and isotopic labeling experiments. At pH ≤ 8, the reaction leads to a C1-symmetric monomethyl Pt(IV) complex (dpms)Pt(IV)Me(OH)2 (5) with high selectivity ≥97%; the reaction rate is first-order in [Pt(II)Me] and fastest at pH 8.0. This behavior was accounted for by assuming that (i) the O2 activation at the Pt(II) center to form a Pt(IV) hydroperoxo species 4 is the reaction rate-limiting step and (ii) the anionic complex 2 is more reactive toward O2 than neutral complex 1 (pKa = 8.15 ± 0.02). At pH ≥ 10, the oxidation is inhibited by OH(-) ions; the reaction order in [Pt(II)Me] changes to 2, consistent with a change of the rate-limiting step, which now involves oxidation of complex 2 by Pt(IV) hydroperoxide 4. At pH ≥ 12, formation of a C1-symmetric dimethyl complex 6, (dpms)Pt(IV)Me2(OH), along with [(dpms)Pt(II)(OH)2](-) (7) becomes the dominant reaction pathway (50-70% selectivity). This change in the product distribution is explained by the formation of a Cs-symmetric intermediate (dpms)Pt(IV)Me(OH)2 (8), a good methylating agent. The secondary deuterium kinetic isotope effect in the reaction leading to complex 6 is negligible; kH/kD = 0.98 ± 0.02. This observation and experiments with a radical scavenger TEMPO do not support a homolytic mechanism. A SN2 mechanism was proposed for the formation of complex 6 that involves complex 2 as a nucleophile and intermediate 8 as an electrophile.

18.
J Am Chem Soc ; 136(6): 2335-41, 2014 Feb 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24450361

RESUMEN

The mechanism of the (dpms)Pt(II)Me(OH(n))((2-n)-) oxidation in water to form (dpms)Pt(IV)Me(OH)2 and (dpms)Pt(IV)Me2(OH) complexes was analyzed using DFT calculations. At pH < 10, (dpms)Pt(II)Me(OH(n))((2-n)-) reacts with O2 to form a methyl Pt(IV)-OOH species with the methyl group trans to the pyridine nitrogen, which then reacts with (dpms)Pt(II)Me(OH(n))((2-n)-) to form 2 equiv of (dpms)Pt(IV)Me(OH)2, the major oxidation product. Both the O2 activation and the O-O bond cleavage are pH dependent. At higher pH, O-O cleavage is inhibited whereas the Pt-to-Pt methyl transfer is not slowed down, so making the latter reaction predominant at pH > 12. The pH-independent Pt-to-Pt methyl transfer involves the isomeric methyl Pt(IV)-OOH species with the methyl group trans to the sulfonate. This methyl Pt(IV)-OOH complex is more stable and more reactive in the Pt-to-Pt methyl-transfer reaction as compared to its isomer with the methyl group trans to the pyridine nitrogen. A similar structure-reactivity relationship is also observed for the S(N)2 functionalization to form methanol by two isomeric (dpms)Pt(IV)Me(OH)2 complexes, one featuring the methyl ligand trans to the sulfonate group and another with the methyl trans to the pyridine nitrogen. The barrier to functionalize the former isomer with the CH3 group trans to the sulfonate group is 2-9 kcal/mol lower. The possibility of the involvement of Pt(III) species in the reactions studied was found to correspond to high-barrier reactions and is hence not viable. It is concluded that the dpms ligand facilitates Pt(II) oxidation both enthalpically and entropically.

19.
J Am Chem Soc ; 135(3): 1073-82, 2013 Jan 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23241061

RESUMEN

The oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) of photosystem II contains a Mn(4)CaO(n) catalytic site, in which reactivity of bridging oxidos is fundamental to OEC function. We synthesized structurally relevant cuboidal Mn(3)MO(n) complexes (M = Mn, Ca, Sc; n = 3,4) to enable mechanistic studies of reactivity and incorporation of µ(3)-oxido moieties. We found that Mn(IV)(3)CaO(4) and Mn(IV)(3)ScO(4) were unreactive toward trimethylphosphine (PMe(3)). In contrast, our Mn(III)(2)Mn(IV)(2)O(4) cubane reacts with this phosphine within minutes to generate a novel Mn(III)(4)O(3) partial cubane plus Me(3)PO. We used quantum mechanics to investigate the reaction paths for oxygen atom transfer to phosphine from Mn(III)(2)Mn(IV)(2)O(4) and Mn(IV)(3)CaO(4). We found that the most favorable reaction path leads to partial detachment of the CH(3)COO(-) ligand, which is energetically feasible only when Mn(III) is present. Experimentally, the lability of metal-bound acetates is greatest for Mn(III)(2)Mn(IV)(2)O(4). These results indicate that even with a strong oxygen atom acceptor, such as PMe(3), the oxygen atom transfer chemistry from Mn(3)MO(4) cubanes is controlled by ligand lability, with the Mn(IV)(3)CaO(4) OEC model being unreactive. The oxidative oxide incorporation into the partial cubane, Mn(III)(4)O(3), was observed experimentally upon treatment with water, base, and oxidizing equivalents. (18)O-labeling experiments provided mechanistic insight into the position of incorporation in the partial cubane structure, consistent with mechanisms involving migration of oxide moieties within the cluster but not consistent with selective incorporation at the site available in the starting species. These results support recent proposals for the mechanism of the OEC, involving oxido migration between distinct positions within the cluster.


Asunto(s)
Calcio/química , Manganeso/química , Oxígeno/química , Teoría Cuántica , Escandio/química , Agua/química , Marcaje Isotópico , Oxidación-Reducción
20.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 109(46): 18679-83, 2012 Nov 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23112167

RESUMEN

Differences in the extent of protonation of functional groups lying on either side of water-hydrophobe interfaces are deemed essential to enzymatic catalysis, molecular recognition, bioenergetic transduction, and atmospheric aerosol-gas exchanges. The sign and range of such differences, however, remain conjectural. Herein we report experiments showing that gaseous carboxylic acids RCOOH(g) begin to deprotonate on the surface of water significantly more acidic than that supporting the dissociation of dissolved acids RCOOH(aq). Thermodynamic analysis indicates that > 6 H(2)O molecules must participate in the deprotonation of RCOOH(g) on water, but quantum mechanical calculations on a model air-water interface predict that such event is hindered by a significant kinetic barrier unless OH(-) ions are present therein. Thus, by detecting RCOO(-) we demonstrate the presence of OH(-) on the aerial side of on pH > 2 water exposed to RCOOH(g). Furthermore, because in similar experiments the base (Me)(3)N(g) is protonated only on pH < 4 water, we infer that the outer surface of water is Brønsted neutral at pH ∼3 (rather than at pH 7 as bulk water), a value that matches the isoelectric point of bubbles and oil droplets in independent electrophoretic experiments. The OH(-) densities sensed by RCOOH(g) on the aerial surface of water, however, are considerably smaller than those at the (>1 nm) deeper shear planes probed in electrophoresis, thereby implying the existence of OH(-) gradients in the interfacial region. This fact could account for the weak OH(-) signals detected by surface-specific spectroscopies.

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