Oxygen reduction and water oxidation are two key processes in fuel cell applications. The oxidation of water to dioxygen is a 4 H+/4 e− process, while oxygen can be fully reduced to water by a 4 e−/4 H+ process or partially reduced by fewer electrons to reactive oxygen species such as H2O2 and O2
−. We demonstrate that a novel manganese corrole complex behaves as a bifunctional catalyst for both the electrocatalytic generation of dioxygen as well as the reduction of dioxygen in aqueous media. Furthermore, our combined kinetic, spectroscopic, and electrochemical study of manganese corroles adsorbed on different electrode materials (down to a submolecular level) reveals mechanistic details of the oxygen evolution and reduction processes.
Electrochemical conversion of CO
2
to alcohols is one of the most challenging methods of conversion and storage of electrical energy in the form of high-energy fuels. The challenge lies in the catalyst design to enable its real-life implementation. Herein, we demonstrate the synthesis and characterization of a cobalt(III) triphenylphosphine corrole complex, which contains three polyethylene glycol residues attached at the
meso
-phenyl groups. Electron-donation and therefore reduction of the cobalt from cobalt(III) to cobalt(I) is accompanied by removal of the axial ligand, thus resulting in a square-planar cobalt(I) complex. The cobalt(I) as an electron-rich supernucleophilic d
8
-configurated metal centre, where two electrons occupy and fill up the antibonding d
z
2
orbital. This orbital possesses high affinity towards electrophiles, allowing for such electronically configurated metals reactions with carbon dioxide. Herein, we report the potential dependent heterogeneous electroreduction of CO
2
to ethanol or methanol of an immobilized cobalt A
3
-corrole catalyst system. In moderately acidic aqueous medium (pH = 6.0), the cobalt corrole modified carbon paper electrode exhibits a Faradaic Efficiency (FE%) of 48 % towards ethanol production.
We probe nuclear and electron spins in a single molecule even beyond the electromagnetic dipole selection rules, at readily accessible magnetic fields (few mT) and temperatures (5 K) by resonant radio-frequency current from a scanning tunneling microscope. We achieve subnanometer spatial resolution combined with single-spin sensitivity, representing a 10 orders of magnitude improvement compared to existing magnetic resonance techniques. We demonstrate the successful resonant spectroscopy of the complete manifold of nuclear and electronic magnetic transitions of up to ΔI(z)=±3 and ΔJ(z)=±12 of single quantum spins in a single molecule. Our method of resonant radio-frequency scanning tunneling spectroscopy offers, atom-by-atom, unprecedented analytical power and spin control with an impact on diverse fields of nanoscience and nanotechnology.
Stable hydrocarbon radicals are able to withstand ambient
conditions.
Their combination with a supporting surface is a promising route toward
novel functionalities or carbon-based magnetic systems. This will
remain elusive until the interplay of radical–radical interactions
and interface effects is fundamentally explored. We employ the tip
of a low-temperature scanning tunneling microscope as a local probe
in combination with density functional theory calculations to investigate
with atomic precision the electronic and geometric effects of a weakly
interacting metal support on an archetypal hydrocarbon radical model
system, i.e., the exceptionally stable spin-1/2 radical α,γ-bisdiphenylene-β-phenylallyl
(BDPA). Our study demonstrates the self-assembly of stable and regular
one- and two-dimensional radical clusters on the Au(111) surface.
Different types of geometric configurations are found to result from
the interplay between the highly anisotropic radical–radical
interactions and interface effects. We investigate the interaction
mechanisms underlying the self-assembly processes and utilize the
different configurations as a geometric design parameter to demonstrate
energy shifts of up to 0.6 eV of the radicals’ frontier molecular
orbitals responsible for their electronic, magnetic, and chemical
properties.
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