Highly Effective Water Oxidation Catalysis with Iridium Complexes through the Use of NaIO4
Full Text
HighlyEffective.pdf
Request a copy
When filling the form you are requesting a copy of the article, that is deposited in the institutional repository (DUGiDocs), at the autor or main autor of the article. It will be the same author who decides to give a copy of the document to the person who requests it, if it considers it appropriate. In any case, the UdG Library doesn’t take part in this process because it is not authorized to provide restricted articles.
Share
Exceptional water oxidation (WO) turnover frequencies (TOF=17 000 h-1), and turnover numbers (TONs) close to 400 000, the largest ever reported for a metal-catalyzed WO reaction, have been found by using [Cp*IrIII (NHC)Cl2] (in which NHC=3-methyl-1-(1 phenylethyl)-im-Idazoline-2-ylidene) as the pre-catalyst and NaIO4 as oxidant in water at 40ºC. The apparent TOF for [Cp*IrIII (NHC)X2] (1X, in which X stands for I (1I), Cl (1Cl), or triflate anion (1OTf)) and [(Cp*-NHCMe)IrIIII2] (2) complexes, is kept constant during almost all of the O2 evolution reaction when using NaIO4 as oxidant. The TOF was found to be dependent on the ligand and on the anion (TOF
ranging from ≈ 600 to ≈1100 h-1 at 25ºC). Degradation of the complexes by oxidation of the organic ligands upon reaction with NaIO4 has been investigated. ¹H NMR, ESI-MS, and dynamic light-scattering measurements (DLS) of the reaction medium indicated that the complex undergoes ràpid degradation, even at low equivalents of oxidant, but this process takes place without formation of nanoparticles. Remarkably, three-month-old solution samples of oxidized pre-catalysts remain equally as active as freshly prepared solutions. A UV/Vis feature band at ƴmax=405 nm is observed in catalytic reaction solutions only when O2 evolves, which may be attributed to a resting state iridium speciation, most probably Ir–oxo species with an oxidation state higher than IV
Tots els drets reservats