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1.
Acc Chem Res ; 55(4): 473-483, 2022 02 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35077152

RESUMO

The synthesis of certain commodity chemicals, e.g., methanol and acetic acid, relies on CO, which is currently mainly produced by the combustion of carbon or natural gas. Photo- or electrochemical conversion of atmospheric CO2 to CO represents an attractive alternative strategy as this approach is carbon-neutral. Such photo- or electrochemically formed CO can also be used in the Fischer-Tropsch process forming liquid hydrocarbons for energy storage applications. The multiple electroreduction of CO2 is preferably coupled with proton transfer steps as this requires less energy than the single outer-sphere 1e- reduction of CO2.In 1984 and 2011, it was shown that [(Lbpy)Re(CO)3Cl] (1) and [(Lbpy)Mn(CO)3Br] (2), respectively, mediate the electrochemical 2e-/2H+ reduction of CO2 forming CO and water (Lbpy = 2,2'-bipyridine). Since proton management is crucial for catalysis, recently the impact of internal proton sources close to the axial position in such complexes has been investigated. However, binuclear complexes have been used rarely as mediators although it has been shown very early for 1 that electron management is also important: the 2e-/2H+ reduction pathway with 1 exhibits a higher reaction rate than going via the singly reduced species, though the pathway requires a higher overpotential. In this Account, we focus on recent developments of binuclear LMn2(CO)6 and LRe2(CO)6 mediators with an internal phenol group in the electroreduction of CO2. In contrast to mononuclear derivatives, for which the impact of the internal proton source on catalysis is very diverse, we always observed a higher reaction rate and for the Mn complexes also a lower overpotential with the binuclear complexes compared to the mononuclear variants. Spectroscopic, electrochemical, and computational studies on the mono- and binuclear complexes shed light on their reactivity under reductive conditions, elucidated the structure of reduced species, unraveled the kinetics for catalytically productive and unproductive (side) reactions, and allowed us to derive some hypothesis on the CO2 reduction mechanism. Finally, I emphasize that the electrohydrogenation of the polar double bonds by the binuclear complex LMn2(CO)6 with a central phenol unit is not restricted to CO2 but is also applicable to organic compounds with C═O bonds.


Assuntos
Dióxido de Carbono , Prótons , Dióxido de Carbono/química , Catálise , Elétrons , Oxirredução
2.
Chemistry ; 28(72): e202202386, 2022 Dec 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36351246

RESUMO

The activation of N2 , CO2 or H2 O to energy-rich products relies on multi-electron transfer reactions, and consequently it seems desirable to understand the basics of light-driven accumulation of multiple redox equivalents. Most of the previously reported molecular acceptors merely allow the storage of up to two electrons. We report on a terphenyl compound including two disulfide bridges, which undergoes four-electron reduction in two separate electrochemical steps, aided by a combination of potential compression and inversion. Under visible-light irradiation using the organic super-electron donor tetrakis(dimethylamino)ethylene, a cascade of light-induced reaction steps is observed, leading to the cleavage of both disulfide bonds. Whereas one of them undergoes extrusion of sulfur to result in a thiophene, the other disulfide is converted to a dithiolate. These insights seem relevant to enhance the current fundamental understanding of photochemical energy storage.

3.
Inorg Chem ; 61(34): 13532-13542, 2022 Aug 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35969867

RESUMO

Metal complexes with ligands that coordinate via the nitrogen atom of azo (N═N) or imino (C═N) groups are of interest due to their π-acceptor properties and redox-active nature, which leads to interesting (opto)electronic properties and reactivity. Here, we describe the synthesis and characterization of rhenium(I) tricarbonyl complexes with neutral N,N-bidentate formazans, which possess both N═N and C═N fragments within the ligand backbone (Ar1-NH-N═C(R3)-N═N-Ar5). The compounds were synthesized by reacting equimolar amounts of [ReBr(CO)5] and the corresponding neutral formazan. X-ray crystallographic and spectroscopic (IR, NMR) characterization confirmed the generation of formazan-type species with the structure fac-[ReBr(CO)3(κ2-N2,N4(Ar1-N1H-N2═C(R3)-N3═N4-Ar5))]. The formazan ligand coordinates the metal center in the 'open' form, generating a five-membered chelate ring with a pendant NH arm. The electronic absorption and emission properties of these complexes are governed by the presence of low-lying π*-orbitals on the ligand as shown by DFT calculations. The high orbital mixing between the metal and ligand results in photophysical properties that contrast to those observed in fac-[ReBr(CO)3(L,L)] species with α-diimine ligands.


Assuntos
Metais , Formazans , Ligantes , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Modelos Moleculares , Estrutura Molecular
4.
Inorg Chem ; 61(30): 11581-11591, 2022 Aug 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35861586

RESUMO

Transition metal halide complexes are used as precursors for reductive N2 activation up to full splitting into nitride complexes. Distinct halide effects on the redox properties and yields are frequently observed yet not well understood. Here, an electrochemical and computational examination of reductive N2 splitting with the rhenium(III) complexes [ReX2(PNP)] (PNP = N(CH2CH2PtBu2)2 and X = Cl, Br, I) is presented. As previously reported for the chloride precursor ( J. Am. Chem. Soc.2018, 140, 7922), the heavier halides give rhenium(V) nitrides upon (electro-)chemical reduction in good yields yet with significantly anodically shifted electrolysis potentials along the halide series. Dinuclear, end-on N2-bridged complexes, [{ReX(PNP)}2(µ-N2)], were identified as key intermediates in all cases. However, while the chloride complex is exclusively formed via 2-electron reduction and ReIII/ReI comproportionation, the iodide system also reacts via an alternative ReII/ReII-dimerization mechanism at less negative potentials. This alternative pathway relies on the absence of the potential inversion after reduction and N2 activation that was observed for the chloride precursor. Computational analysis of the relevant ReIII/II and ReII/I redox couples by energy decomposition analysis attributes the halide-induced trends of the potentials to the dominating electrostatic Re-X bonding interactions over contributions from charge transfer.

5.
Inorg Chem ; 61(35): 13944-13955, 2022 Sep 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36001121

RESUMO

Molecular systems combining light harvesting and charge storage are receiving great attention in the context of, for example, artificial photosynthesis and solar fuel generation. As part of ongoing efforts to develop new concepts for photoinduced proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactivities, we report a cyclometallated iridium(III) complex [Ir(ppy)2(S-Sbpy)](PF6) ([1]PF6) equipped with our previously developed sulfurated bipyridine ligand S-Sbpy. A new one-step synthetic protocol for S-Sbpy is developed, starting from commercially available 2,2'-bipyridine, which significantly facilitates the use of this ligand. [1]+ features a two-electron reduction with potential inversion (|E1| > |E2|) at moderate potentials (E1 = -1.12, E2 = -1.11 V versus. Fc+/0 at 253 K), leading to a dithiolate species [1]-. Protonation with weak acids allows for determination of pKa = 23.5 in MeCN for the S-H···S- unit of [1H]. The driving forces for both the H atom and the hydride transfer are calculated to be ∼60 kcal mol-1 and verified experimentally by reaction with a suitable H atom and a hydride acceptor, demonstrating the ability of [1]+ to serve as a versatile PCET reagent, albeit with limited thermal stability. In MeCN solution, an orange emission for [1]PF6 from a triplet-excited state was found. Density functional calculations and ultrafast absorption spectroscopy are used to give insight into the excited-state dynamics of the complex and suggest a significantly stretched S-S bond for the lowest triplet-state T1. The structural responsiveness of the disulfide unit is proposed to open an effective relaxation channel toward the ground state, explaining the unexpectedly short lifetime of [1]+. These insights as well as the quantitative ground-state thermochemistry data provide valuable information for the use of S-Sbpy-functionalized complexes and their disulfide-/dithiol-directed PCET reactivity.


Assuntos
Compostos Heterocíclicos , Irídio , Dissulfetos , Irídio/química , Ligantes , Luminescência , Prótons
6.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(4): e202114586, 2022 Jan 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34826183

RESUMO

The discovery of metallic conductivity in polyacetylene [-HC=CH-]n upon doping represents a landmark achievement. However, the insolubility of polyacetylene and a dearth of methods for its chemical modification have limited its widespread use. Here, we employ a ring-opening metathesis polymerization (ROMP) protocol to prepare functionalized polyacetylenes (fPAs) bearing: (1) electron-deficient boryl (-BR2 ) and phosphoryl (-P(O)R2 ) side chains; (2) electron-donating amino (-NR2 ) groups, and (3) ring-fused 1,2,3-triazolium units via strain-promoted Click chemistry. These functional groups render most of the fPAs soluble and can lead to intense light absorption across the visible to near-IR region. Also, the presence of redox-active boryl and amino groups leads to opposing near-IR optical responses upon (electro)chemical reduction or oxidation. Some of the resulting fPAs show greatly enhanced air stability when compared to known polyacetylenes. Lastly, these fPAs can be cross-linked to yield network materials with the full retention of optical properties.

7.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(16): 6238-6247, 2021 04 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33861085

RESUMO

The transfer of multiple electrons and protons is of crucial importance in many reactions relevant in biology and chemistry. Natural redox-active cofactors are capable of storing and releasing electrons and protons under relatively mild conditions and thus serve as blueprints for synthetic proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reagents. Inspired by the prominence of the 2e-/2H+ disulfide/dithiol couple in biology, we investigate herein the diverse PCET reactivity of a Re complex equipped with a bipyridine ligand featuring a unique SH···-S moiety in the backbone. The disulfide bond in fac-[Re(S-Sbpy)(CO)3Cl] (1, S-Sbpy = [1,2]dithiino[4,3-b:5,6-b']dipyridine) undergoes two successive reductions at equal potentials of -1.16 V vs Fc+|0 at room temperature forming [Re(S2bpy)(CO)3Cl]2- (12-, S2bpy = [2,2'-bipyridine]-3,3'-bis(thiolate)). 12- has two adjacent thiolate functions at the bpy periphery, which can be protonated forming the S-H···-S unit, 1H-. The disulfide/dithiol switch exhibits a rich PCET reactivity and can release a proton (ΔG°H+ = 34 kcal mol-1, pKa = 24.7), an H atom (ΔG°H• = 59 kcal mol-1), or a hydride ion (ΔG°H- = 60 kcal mol-1) as demonstrated in the reactivity with various organic test substrates.


Assuntos
Complexos de Coordenação/química , Dissulfetos/química , Rênio/química , Tolueno/análogos & derivados , Complexos de Coordenação/síntese química , Transporte de Elétrons , Hidrogênio/química , Cinética , Conformação Molecular , Oxirredução , Prótons , Termodinâmica , Tolueno/química
8.
Chemistry ; 27(33): 8572-8579, 2021 Jun 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33848023

RESUMO

The synthesis of the new bulky vinyllithium reagent (Me IPr=CH)Li, (Me IPr=[(MeCNDipp)2 C]; Dipp=2,6-iPr2 C6 H3 ) is reported. This vinyllithium precursor was found to act as a general source of the anionic 2σ, 2π-electron donor ligand [Me IPr=CH]- . Furthermore, a high-yielding route to the degradation-resistant SiII precursor Me IPr⋅SiBr2 is presented. The efficacy of (Me IPr=CH)Li in synthesis was demonstrated by the generation of a complete inorganic divinyltetrelene series (Me IPrCH)2 E: (E=Si to Pb). (Me IPrCH)2 Si: represents the first two-coordinate acyclic silylene not bound by heteroatom donors, with dual electrophilic and nucleophilic character at the SiII center noted. Cyclic voltammetry shows this electron-rich silylene to be a potent reducing agent, rivalling the reducing power of the 19-electron complex cobaltocene (Cp2 Co).

9.
Chemistry ; 26(62): 14137-14143, 2020 Nov 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32497312

RESUMO

Hydrogenation reactions are fundamental functional group transformations in chemical synthesis. Here, we introduce an electrochemical method for the hydrogenation of ketones and aldehydes by in situ formation of a Mn-H species. We utilise protons and electric current as surrogate for H2 and a base-metal complex to form selectively the alcohols. The method is chemoselective for the hydrogenation of C=O bonds over C=C bonds. Mechanistic studies revealed initial 3 e- reduction of the catalyst forming the steady state species [Mn2 (H-1 L)(CO)6 ]- . Subsequently, we assume protonation, reduction and internal proton shift forming the hydride species. Finally, the transfer of the hydride and a proton to the ketone yields the alcohol and the steady state species is regenerated via reduction. The interplay of two manganese centres and the internal proton relay represent the key features for ketone and aldehyde reduction as the respective mononuclear complex and the complex without the proton relay are barely active.

10.
Inorg Chem ; 59(7): 4972-4984, 2020 Apr 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32142275

RESUMO

The development of new solar-to-fuel scenarios is of great importance, but the construction of molecular systems that convert sunlight into chemical energy represents a challenge. One specific issue is that the molecular systems have to be able to accumulate redox equivalents to mediate the photodriven transformation of relevant small molecules, which mostly involves the orchestrated transfer of multiple electrons and protons. Disulfide/dithiol interconversions are prominent 2e-/2H+ couples and can play an important role for redox control and charge storage. With this background in mind, a new photosensitizer [Ru(S-Sbpy)(bpy)2]2+ (12+) equipped with a disulfide functionalized bpy ligand (S-Sbpy, bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine) was synthesized and has been comprehensively studied, including structural characterization by X-ray diffraction. In-depth electrochemical studies show that the S-Sbpy ligand in 12+ can be reduced twice at moderate potentials (around -1.1 V vs Fc+/0), and simulation of the cyclic voltammetry (CV) traces revealed potential inversion (E2 > E1) and allowed to derive kinetic parameters for the sequential electron-transfer processes. However, reduction at room temperature also triggers the ejection of one sulfur atom from 12+, leading to the formation of [Ru(Sbpy)(bpy)2]2+(22+). This chemical reaction can be suppressed by decreasing the temperature from 298 to 248 K. Compared to the archetypical photosensitizer [Ru(bpy)3]2+, 12+ features an additional low energy optical excitation in the MLCT region, originating from charge transfer from the metal center to the S-Sbpy ligand (aka MSCT) according to time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) calculations. Analysis of the excited states of 12+ on the basis of ground-state Wigner sampling and using charge-transfer descriptors has shown that bpy modification with a peripheral disulfide moiety leads to an energy splitting between charge-transfer excitations to the S-Sbpy and the bpy ligands, offering the possibility of selective charge transfer from the metal to either type of ligands. Compound 12+ is photostable and shows an emission from a 3MLCT state in deoxygenated acetonitrile with a lifetime of 109 ns. This work demonstrates a rationally designed system that enables future studies of photoinduced multielectron, multiproton PCET chemistry.

11.
Inorg Chem ; 59(7): 4215-4227, 2020 Apr 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32155052

RESUMO

Mesoionic carbenes have found wide use as components of homogeneous catalysts. Recent discoveries have, however, shown that metal complexes of such ligands also have huge potential in photochemical research and in the activation of small molecules. We present here three ReI complexes with mesoionic pyridyl-carbene ligands. The complexes display reduction steps which were investigated via UV-vis-NIR-IR spectro-electrochemistry, and these results point toward an EC mechanism. The ReI compounds emit in the visible range in solution at room temperature with excited state lifetimes that are dependent on the substituents of the mesoionic carbenes. These complexes are also potent electrocatalysts for the selective reduction of CO2 to CO. Whereas the substituents on the carbenes have no influence on the reduction potentials, the electrocatalytic efficiency is strongly dependent on the substituents. This fact is likely a result of catalyst instability. The results presented here thus introduce mesoionic carbenes as new potent ligands for the generation of emissive ReI complexes and for electrocatalytic CO2 reduction.

12.
Eur J Inorg Chem ; 2020(15-16): 1402-1410, 2020 Apr 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32421038

RESUMO

The splitting of N2 into well-defined terminal nitride complexes is a key reaction for nitrogen fixation at ambient conditions. In continuation of our previous work on rhenium pincer mediated N2 splitting, nitrogen activation and cleavage upon (electro)chemical reduction of [ReCl2(L2)] {L2 = N(CHCHPtBu2)2 -} is reported. The electrochemical characterization of [ReCl2(L2)] and comparison with our previously reported platform [ReCl2(L1)] {L1 = N(CH2CH2PtBu2)2 -} provides mechanistic insight to rationalize the dependence of nitride yield on the reductant. Furthermore, the reactivity of N2 derived nitride complex [Re(N)Cl(L2)] with electrophiles is presented.

13.
Chemistry ; 25(21): 5555-5564, 2019 Apr 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30695114

RESUMO

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/H2 O)≈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.

14.
Inorg Chem ; 58(16): 10444-10453, 2019 Aug 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31268703

RESUMO

Herein, we describe the redox chemistry of bi- and mononuclear α-diimine-Mn(CO)3 complexes with an internal proton source in close proximity to the metal centers and their catalytic activity in the electrochemically driven CO2 reduction reactions. In order to address the impact of the two metal sites and of the proton source, we investigate a binuclear complex with phenol moiety, 1, a binuclear Mn complex with methoxyphenol unit instead, 2, and the mononuclear analogue with a phenol unit, 3. Spectroelectrochemical investigation of the complexes in dmf under a nitrogen atmosphere indicates that 1 and 3 undergo a reductive H2 formation forming [Mn2(H-1L1)(CO)6Br] and [Mn(H-1L3)(CO)3], respectively, which is redox neutral for the complex and equivalent to a deprotonation of the phenol unit. The reaction likely proceeds via internal proton transfer from the phenol moiety to the reduced metal center forming a Mn-H species. 2 dimerizes during reduction, forming [Mn2(L2)(CO)6]2, but 1 and 3 do not. Reduction of 1, 2, and 3 is accompanied by bromide loss, and the final species represent [Mn2(H-1L1)(CO)6]3-, [Mn2(L2)(CO)6]2-, and [Mn(H-1L3)(CO)3]2-, respectively. 1 and 2 are active catalysts in the electrochemical CO2 reduction reaction, whereas 3 decomposes quickly under an applied potential. Thus, the second redox active unit is crucial for enhanced stability. The proton relay in 1 alters the kinetics for the 2H+/2e- reduced products of CO2 in dmf/water mixtures. For 2, CO is the only product, whereas formate and CO are formed in similar amounts, 40% and 50%, respectively, in the presence of 1. Thus, the reaction rate for the internal proton transfer from the phenol moiety to the metal center forming the putative Mn-H species and subsequent CO2 insertion as well as the reaction rate of the reduced metal center with CO2 forming CO are similar. The overpotential with regard to the standard redox potential of CO2 to CO and the observed overall rate constant for catalysis at scan rates of 0.1 V s-1 are higher with 1 than with 2, that is, the OH group is beneficial for catalysis due to the internal proton transfer.

15.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(45): 15419-15424, 2018 11 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30359019

RESUMO

The Lewis acid-base reaction between a nucleophilic hafnocene-based germylene and tris-pentafluorophenylborane (B(C6F5)3) to give the conventional B-Ge bonded species in almost quantitative yield is reported. This reaction is surprisingly slow, and during its course, radical intermediates are detected by EPR and UV-vis spectroscopy. This suggests that the reaction is initiated by a single electron-transfer step. The hereby-involved germanium radical cation was independently synthesized by oxidation of the germylene by the trityl cation or strong silyl-Lewis acids. A perfluorinated tetraarylborate salt of the radical cation was fully characterized including an XRD analysis. Its structural features and the results of DFT calculations indicate that the radical cation is a hafnium(III)-centered radical that is formed by a redox-induced electron transfer (RIET) from the ligand to the hafnium atom. This valence isomerization slows down the coupling of the radicals to form the polar Lewis acid-base product. The implications of this observation are briefly discussed in light of the recent finding that radical pairs are formed in frustrated Lewis pairs.

16.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(25): 7922-7935, 2018 06 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29856611

RESUMO

A comprehensive mechanistic study of N2 activation and splitting into terminal nitride ligands upon reduction of the rhenium dichloride complex [ReCl2(PNP)] is presented (PNP- = N(CH2CH2P tBu2)2-). Low-temperature studies using chemical reductants enabled full characterization of the N2-bridged intermediate [{(PNP)ClRe}2(N2)] and kinetic analysis of the N-N bond scission process. Controlled potential electrolysis at room temperature also resulted in formation of the nitride product [Re(N)Cl(PNP)]. This first example of molecular electrochemical N2 splitting into nitride complexes enabled the use of cyclic voltammetry (CV) methods to establish the mechanism of reductive N2 activation to form the N2-bridged intermediate. CV data was acquired under Ar and N2, and with varying chloride concentration, rhenium concentration, and N2 pressure. A series of kinetic models was vetted against the CV data using digital simulations, leading to the assignment of an ECCEC mechanism (where "E" is an electrochemical step and "C" is a chemical step) for N2 activation that proceeds via initial reduction to ReII, N2 binding, chloride dissociation, and further reduction to ReI before formation of the N2-bridged, dinuclear intermediate by comproportionation with the ReIII precursor. Experimental kinetic data for all individual steps could be obtained. The mechanism is supported by density functional theory computations, which provide further insight into the electronic structure requirements for N2 splitting in the tetragonal frameworks enforced by rigid pincer ligands.

17.
Chemistry ; 24(19): 4864-4870, 2018 Apr 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29341285

RESUMO

[1,2]Dithiino[4,3-b:5,6-b']dipyridine (1) and its protonated open form 3,3'-dithiol-2,2'-bipyridine (2) were synthesised and their interconversion investigated. The X-ray structure of 2 revealed an anti orientation of the two pyridine units and a zwitterionic form. In depth electrochemical studies in combination with DFT calculations lead to a comprehensive picture of the redox chemistry of 1 in the absence and presence of protons. Initial one-electron reduction at E1 =-1.20 V results in the formation of the radical anion 1red with much elongated S-S bond, which readily undergoes further reduction at E2 =-1.38 V. Water triggers a potential inversion (E≥-1.13 V for the second reduction) as the radical anion 1red is protonated at its basic N atom. DFT studies revealed that S-S bond breaking and twisting of the pyridine units generally occurs after the second reduction step, whereas the potential inversion induced by protonation is a result of charge compensation. The CV data were simulated to derive rate constants for the individual chemical and electrochemical reactions for both scenarios in the absence and presence of protons.

18.
Chemistry ; 23(69): 17438-17443, 2017 Dec 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28898478

RESUMO

One-electron oxidation of the rhodium(I) azido complex [Rh(N3 )(PNP)] (5), bearing the neutral, pyridine-based PNP ligand 2,6-bis(di-tert-butylphosphinomethyl)pyridine, leads to instantaneous and selective formation of the mononuclear rhodium(I) dinitrogen complex [Rh(N2 )(PNP)]+ (9+ ). Interestingly, complex 5 also acts as a catalyst for electrochemical N3- oxidation (Ep ≈-0.23 V vs. Fc+/0 ) in the presence of excess azide. This is of potential relevance for the design of azide-based and direct ammonia fuel cells, expelling only harmless dinitrogen as an exhaust gas.

19.
Inorg Chem ; 56(7): 4176-4185, 2017 Apr 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28318245

RESUMO

Herein, we present the reduction chemistry of a dinuclear α-diimine rhenium complex, 1, [Re2(L)(CO)6Cl2], with a proton responsive ligand and its application as a catalyst in the electrochemical CO2 reduction reaction (L = 4-tert-butyl-2,6-bis(6-(1H-imidazol-2-yl)-pyridin-2-yl)phenol). The complex has a phenol group in close proximity to the active center, which may act as a proton relay during catalysis, and pyridine-NH-imidazole units as α-diimine donors. The complex is an active catalyst for the electrochemical CO2 reduction reaction. CO is the main product after catalysis, and only small amounts of H2 were observed, which can be related to the ligand reactivity. The ic/ip ratio of 20 in dimethylformamide (DMF) + 10% water for 1 points to a higher activity with regard to [Re(bpy)(CO)3Cl] in MeCN/H2O, albeit 1 requires a slightly larger overpotential (bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine). Spectroscopic and theoretical investigations revealed detailed information about the reduction chemistry of 1. The complex exhibits two reduction processes in DMF, and each process was identified as a two-electron reduction in the absence of CO2. The first 2e- reduction is ligand based and leads to homolytic N-H bond cleavage reactions at the imidazole units of 1, which is equal to a net double proton removal from 1 forming [Re2(LH-2)(CO)6Cl2]2-. The second 2e- reduction process has been identified as an O-H bond cleavage reaction at the phenol group, removal of chloride ions from the coordination spheres of the metal ions, and a ligand-centered one-electron reduction of [Re2(LH-3)(CO)6Cl]2-. In the presence of CO2, the second reduction process initiates catalysis. The reduced species is highly nucleophilic and likely favors the reaction with CO2 instead of O-H bond cleavage.

20.
Inorg Chem ; 55(3): 1061-8, 2016 Feb 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26788812

RESUMO

We synthesized two dinuclear copper complexes, which have ionizable N imidazole and N pyrazole protons in the ligand, respectively, and determined the BDFE of the hypothetical H atom transfer reactions Cu(II)(LH(-1)) + H(•) ↔ Cu(I)(L) in MeOH/H2O (BDFE: bond dissociation Gibbs (free) energy). The ligands have two adjacent N,N',O-binding pockets, which differ in one N-heterocycle: L(a) has an imidazole unit and L(c), a pyrazole unit. The copper(II) complexes of L(a) and L(c) have been characterized, and the substitution pattern has only little influence on the structural properties. The BDFEs of the hypothetical PCET reactions have been determined by means of the species distribution and the redox potentials of the involved species in MeOH/H2O (80/20 by weight). The pyrazole copper complex 3 exhibits a lower BDFE than the isoelectronic imidazole copper complex 1 (1, 292(3) kJ mol(-1); 3, 279(1) kJ mol(-1)). The difference is mainly caused by the higher acidity of the N pyrazole proton of 3 compared to the N imidazole proton of 1. The redox potentials of 1 and 3 are very similar.

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