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Unusual Water Oxidation Mechanism via a Redox-Active Copper Polypyridyl Complex

[Image: see text] To improve Cu-based water oxidation (WO) catalysts, a proper mechanistic understanding of these systems is required. In contrast to other metals, high-oxidation-state metal–oxo species are unlikely intermediates in Cu-catalyzed WO because π donation from the oxo ligand to the Cu ce...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: den Boer, Daan, Konovalov, Andrey I., Siegler, Maxime A., Hetterscheid, Dennis G. H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10091478/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36989161
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.3c00477
Descripción
Sumario:[Image: see text] To improve Cu-based water oxidation (WO) catalysts, a proper mechanistic understanding of these systems is required. In contrast to other metals, high-oxidation-state metal–oxo species are unlikely intermediates in Cu-catalyzed WO because π donation from the oxo ligand to the Cu center is difficult due to the high number of d electrons of Cu(II) and Cu(III). As a consequence, an alternative WO mechanism must take place instead of the typical water nucleophilic attack and the inter- or intramolecular radical–oxo coupling pathways, which were previously proposed for Ru-based catalysts. [Cu(II)(HL)(OTf)(2)] [HL = Hbbpya = N,N-bis(2,2′-bipyrid-6-yl)amine)] was investigated as a WO catalyst bearing the redox-active HL ligand. The Cu catalyst was found to be active as a WO catalyst at pH 11.5, at which the deprotonated complex [Cu(II)(L(–))(H(2)O)](+) is the predominant species in solution. The overall WO mechanism was found to be initiated by two proton-coupled electron-transfer steps. Kinetically, a first-order dependence in the catalyst, a zeroth-order dependence in the phosphate buffer, a kinetic isotope effect of 1.0, a ΔH(⧧) value of 4.49 kcal·mol(–1), a ΔS(⧧) value of −42.6 cal·mol(–1)·K(–1), and a ΔG(⧧) value of 17.2 kcal·mol(–1) were found. A computational study supported the formation of a Cu–oxyl intermediate, [Cu(II)(L(•))(O(•))(H(2)O)](+). From this intermediate onward, formation of the O–O bond proceeds via a single-electron transfer from an approaching hydroxide ion to the ligand. Throughout the mechanism, the Cu(II) center is proposed to be redox-inactive.