While the frustrated Lewis pair (FLP) concept has been
successfully
extended to heterogeneous catalysis, the underlying factors governing
the catalytic performances of FLPs and designing strategies remain
elusive. Herein, a theoretical study is performed to design metal-free
heterogeneous FLPs with tunable activity for hydrogen dissociation.
The designed FLPs constructed by functionalizing the N-doped zigzag
graphene edge with eight functional groups −BX2 (X
= F, Cl, Br, H, CH3, CF3, CN, NO2) can readily heterolytically dissociate H2 (H2 → Hδ− + Hδ+) with
reaction barriers varying from 0.15 to 0.70 eV, showing their comparable
activity to homogeneous FLPs. More importantly, FLP acidities of designed
FLPs are linearly correlated with the reaction energies of H2 dissociation, suggesting the significant role of FLP acidity in
determining their catalytic activity. Further calculations show that
the reaction barriers of hydrogenation of CO2 also linearly
correlate with the reaction energies of H2 dissociation
and accordingly are governed by FLP acidity. Overall, this study provides
a route for designing metal-free heterogeneous FLPs on graphene materials
and discloses a close relationship between the composition (N···BX2), the electronic structure (FLP acidity), and the functionality
(catalytic ability) of the FLPs.