Anionic Activation of CO2 via (Mn-CO2)- Complex on Magic-Numbered Anionic Coinage Metal Clusters Mn- (M = Cu, Ag, Au).
Eunhak LimJiyoung HeoXinxing ZhangKit H BowenSang Hak LeeSeong Keun KimPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry. A (2021)
Given the immense challenge of excessive accumulation of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the earth's atmosphere, an extensive search is under way to convert atmospheric CO2 to compounds of more utility. With CO2 being thermodynamically extremely stable, activation of CO2 is the first and most important step toward its chemical conversion. Building upon our earlier model for the anionic activation of CO2 with azabenzene and inspired by the work of others on metal atom-CO2 complexes, we investigated the possibility of anionic activation of CO2 on small anionic metal clusters, which would have implications for catalytic conversion of CO2 on metal surfaces with atomic-scale structural irregularities. We carried out theoretical calculations using density functional theory to examine small anionic metal clusters of Cu, Ag, and Au to check whether they form a complex with CO2, with the sign of CO2 being chemically activated. We found that a class of anionic metal clusters Mn- with 1, 2, and 6 atoms consistently produced the activated complex (Mn-CO2)- for all three metals. There exists a strong interaction between the CO2 moiety and Mn- via a partially covalent M-C bond with a full delocalization of the electronic charge, as a result of electron transfer from the HOMO of Mn- to the LUMO of CO2 as in metal-CO2 π-backbonding. We examined the interaction of frontier orbitals from the viewpoints of the orbital geometry and orbital energetics and found that the above magic numbers are consistent with both aspects.
Keyphrases
- density functional theory
- metal organic framework
- room temperature
- molecular dynamics
- transition metal
- electron transfer
- quantum dots
- gold nanoparticles
- escherichia coli
- sensitive detection
- body mass index
- molecular dynamics simulations
- high resolution
- reduced graphene oxide
- physical activity
- single molecule
- ionic liquid