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Amine Hole Scavengers Facilitate Both Electron and Hole Transfer in a Nanocrystal/Molecular Hybrid Photocatalyst

[Image: see text] A well-known catalyst, fac-Re(4,4′-R(2)-bpy)(CO)(3)Cl (bpy = bipyridine; R = COOH) (ReC0A), has been widely studied for CO(2) reduction; however, its photocatalytic performance is limited due to its narrow absorption range. Quantum dots (QDs) are efficient light harvesters that off...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gebre, Sara T., Kiefer, Laura M., Guo, Facheng, Yang, Ke R., Miller, Christopher, Liu, Yawei, Kubiak, Clifford P., Batista, Victor S., Lian, Tianquan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9912264/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36706437
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.2c13464
Descripción
Sumario:[Image: see text] A well-known catalyst, fac-Re(4,4′-R(2)-bpy)(CO)(3)Cl (bpy = bipyridine; R = COOH) (ReC0A), has been widely studied for CO(2) reduction; however, its photocatalytic performance is limited due to its narrow absorption range. Quantum dots (QDs) are efficient light harvesters that offer several advantages, including size tunability and broad absorption in the solar spectrum. Therefore, photoinduced CO(2) reduction over a broad range of the solar spectrum could be enabled by ReC0A catalysts heterogenized on QDs. Here, we investigate interfacial electron transfer from Cd(3)P(2) QDs to ReC0A complexes covalently bound on the QD surface, induced by photoexcitation of the QD. We explore the effect of triethylamine, a sacrificial hole scavenger incorporated to replenish the QD with electrons. Through combined transient absorption spectroscopic and computational studies, we demonstrate that electron transfer from Cd(3)P(2) to ReC0A can be enhanced by a factor of ∼4 upon addition of triethylamine. We hypothesize that the rate enhancement is a result of triethylamine possibly altering the energetics of the Cd(3)P(2)–ReC0A system by interacting with the quantum dot surface, deprotonation of the quantum dot, and preferential solvation, resulting in a shift of the conduction band edge to more negative potentials. We also observe the rate enhancement in other QD–electron acceptor systems. Our findings provide mechanistic insights into hole scavenger–quantum dot interactions and how they may influence photoinduced interfacial electron transfer processes.