Electrocatalysis
is a promising tool for utilizing carbon dioxide
as a feedstock in the chemical industry. However, controlling the
selectivity for different CO2 reduction products remains
a major challenge. We report a series of manganese carbonyl complexes
with elaborated bipyridine or phenanthroline ligands that can reduce
CO2 to either formic acid, if the ligand structure contains
strategically positioned tertiary amines, or CO, if the amine groups
are absent in the ligand or are placed far from the metal center.
The amine-modified complexes are benchmarked to be among the most
active catalysts for reducing CO2 to formic acid, with
a maximum turnover frequency of up to 5500 s–1 at
an overpotential of 630 mV. The conversion even works at overpotentials
as low as 300 mV, although through an alternative mechanism. Mechanistically,
the formation of a Mn–hydride species aided by in situ protonated
amine groups was determined to be a key intermediate by cyclic voltammetry, 1H NMR, DFT calculations, and infrared spectroelectrochemistry.
Proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET), an essential process in nature with a well-known example of photosynthesis, has recently been employed in metal complexes to improve energy conversion efficiency, but a profound...
The halogen elimination of 1,2-diiodoethane (C2H4I2) and 1,2-diiodotetrafluoroethane (C2F4I2) serves as a model reaction for investigating the influence of fluorination on reaction dynamics and solute–solvent interactions in solution-phase reactions. While the kinetics and reaction pathways of the halogen elimination reaction of C2H4I2 were reported to vary substantially depending on the solvent, the solvent effects on the photodissociation of C2F4I2 remain to be explored, as its reaction dynamics have only been studied in methanol. Here, to investigate the solvent dependence, we conducted a time-resolved X-ray liquidography (TRXL) experiment on C2F4I2 in cyclohexane. The data revealed that (ⅰ) the solvent dependence of the photoreaction of C2F4I2 is not as strong as that observed for C2H4I2, and (ⅱ) the nongeminate recombination leading to the formation of I2 is slower in cyclohexane than in methanol. We also show that the molecular structures of the relevant species determined from the structural analysis of TRXL data provide an excellent benchmark for DFT calculations, especially for investigating the relevance of exchange-correlation functionals used for the structural optimization of haloalkanes. This study demonstrates that TRXL is a powerful technique to study solvent dependence in the solution phase.
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