Steric and Lewis Basicity Influence of the Second Coordination Sphere on Electrocatalytic CO2 Reduction by Manganese Bipyridyl Complexes
- Univ. of Massachusetts, Boston, MA (United States)
- Wayne State Univ., Detroit, MI (United States)
- Brookhaven National Lab. (BNL), Upton, NY (United States)
This study aims to provide a greater insight into the balance between steric (bpy vs (Ph)2bpy vs mes2bpy ligands) and Lewis basic ((Ph)2bpy vs (MeOPh)2bpy vs (MeSPh)2bpy ligands) influence on the efficiencies of the protonation-first vs reduction-first CO2 reduction mechanisms with [MnI(R2bpy)(CO)3(CH3CN)]+ precatalysts, and on their respective transition-state geometries/energies for rate-determining C–OH bond cleavage toward CO evolution. The presence of only modest steric bulk at the 6,6'-diphenyl-2,2'-bipyridyl ((Ph)2bpy) ligand has here allowed unique insight into the mechanism of catalyst activation and CO2 binding by navigating a perfect medium between the nonsterically encumbered bpy-based and the highly sterically encumbered mes2bpy-based precatalysts. Cyclic voltammetry conducted in CO2-saturated electrolyte for the (Ph)2bpy-based precatalyst [2-CH3CN]+ confirms that CO2 binding occurs at the two-electron-reduced activated catalyst [2]– in the absence of an excess proton source, in contrast to prior assumptions that all manganese catalysts require a strong acid for CO2 binding. This observation is supported by computed free energies of the parent–child reaction for [Mn–Mn]o dimer formation, where increased steric hindrance relative to the bpy-based precatalyst correlates with favorable CO2 binding. A critical balance must be adhered to, however, as the absence of steric bulk in the bpy-based precatalyst [1-CH3CN]+ maintains a lower overpotential than [2-CH3CN]+ at the protonation-first pathway with comparable kinetic performance, whereas an ~2-fold greater TOFmax is observed at its reduction-first pathway with an almost identical overpotential as [2-CH3CN]+. Notably, excessive steric bulk in the mes2bpy-based precatalyst [3-CH3CN]+ results in increased activation free energies of the C–OH bond cleavage transition states for both the protonation-first and the reduction-first pathways relative to both [1-CH3CN]+ and [2-CH3CN]+. In fact, [3-CH3CN]+ requires a 1 V window beyond its onset potential to reach its peak catalytic current, which is in contrast to the narrower (<0.30 V) potential response window of the remaining catalysts here studied. Furthermore, voltammetry recorded under 1 atm of CO2 with 2.8 M (5%) H2O establishes [2-CH3CN]+ to have the lowest overpotential (η = 0.75 V) in the series here studied, attributed to its ability to lie “on the fence” when providing sufficient steric bulk to hinder (but not prevent) [Mn–Mn]o dimerization, while simultaneously having a limited steric impact on the free energy of activation for the rate-determining C–OH bond cleavage transition state. While the methoxyphenyl bpy-based precatalyst [4-CH3CN]+ possesses an increased steric presence relative to [2-CH3CN]+, this is offset by its capacity to stabilize the C–OH bond cleavage transition states of both the protonation-first and the reduction-first pathways by facilitating second coordination sphere H-bonding stabilization.
- Research Organization:
- Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL), Upton, NY (United States)
- Sponsoring Organization:
- USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES); National Science Foundation (NSF)
- Grant/Contract Number:
- SC0012704; CHE-1800062; CHE-1855681
- OSTI ID:
- 1897506
- Report Number(s):
- BNL-223671-2022-JAAM
- Journal Information:
- Inorganic Chemistry, Vol. 61, Issue 40; ISSN 0020-1669
- Publisher:
- American Chemical Society (ACS)Copyright Statement
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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