Ligand Controls the Activity of Light-Driven Water Oxidation Catalyzed by Nickel(II) Porphyrin Complexes in Neutral Homogeneous Aqueous Solutions.
Chengyu LiuDaan van den BosBarthold den HartogDennis van der MeijAshok RamakrishnanSylvestre A BonnetPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
Finding photostable, first-row transition metal-based molecular systems for photocatalytic water oxidation is a step towards sustainable solar fuel production. Herein, we discovered that nickel(II) hydrophilic porphyrins are molecular catalysts for photocatalytic water oxidation in neutral to acidic aqueous solutions using [Ru(bpy)3 ]2+ as photosensitizer and [S2 O8 ]2- as sacrificial electron acceptor. Electron-poorer Ni-porphyrins bearing 8 fluorine or 4 methylpyridinium substituents as electron-poorer porphyrins afforded 6-fold higher turnover frequencies (TOFs; ca. 0.65 min-1 ) than electron-richer analogues. However, the electron-poorest Ni-porphyrin bearing 16 fluorine substituents was photocatalytically inactive under such conditions, because the potential at which catalytic O2 evolution starts was too high (+1.23 V vs. NHE) to be driven by the photochemically generated [Ru(bpy)3 ]3+ . Critically, these Ni-porphyrin catalysts showed excellent stability in photocatalytic conditions, as a second photocatalytic run replenished with a new dose of photosensitizer, afforded only 1-3 % less O2 than during the first photocatalytic run.