Imidazole for Pyridine Substitution Leads to Enhanced Activity Under Milder Conditions in Cobalt Water Oxidation Electrocatalysis.
Noah D McMillionAmanda W WilsonMcKenna K GoetzMu-Chieh ChangChia-Cheng LinWei-Jie FengCharles C L McCroryJohn S AndersonPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2018)
A previously reported cobalt complex featuring a tetraimidazolyl-substituted pyridine chelate is an active water oxidation electrocatalyst with moderate overpotential at pH 7. While this complex decomposes rapidly to a less-active species under electrocatalytic conditions, detailed electrochemical studies support the agency of an initial molecular catalyst. Cyclic voltammetry measurements confirm that the imidazolyl donors result in a more electron-rich Co center when compared with previous pyridine-based systems. The primary changes in electrocatalytic behavior of the present case are enhanced activity at lower pH and a marked dependence of catalytic activity on pH.