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Metalloid-Cluster Ligands Enabling Stable and Active FeN 4 -Te n Motifs for the Oxygen Reduction Reaction.

Bifa JiJiali GouYongping ZhengXiaolong ZhouPinit KidkhunthodYehai WangQingyun TangYongbing Tang
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2022)
In nature, the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) is catalyzed by cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes containing heme iron centers with an axial thiolate ligand (FeN 4 -S), which are among the most finely developed catalysts by natural selection. However, the exceptional ORR activity and selectivity of CYP enzymes originate from their non-rigid and self-adaptive coordination network with molecular ligands, which sacrifices the stability of the active motifs under electrochemical reaction conditions. Here, a design strategy to circumvent this dilemma by incorporating Fe-N 4 motifs into carbon matrices instead of the protein scaffold and replacing the axial molecular thiolate ligand with a stable tellurium cluster (Te n ) is demonstrated. Theoretical calculations indicate a moderate interaction between Fe 3d and Te 5p orbitals once n > 2, allowing the FeTe bond to dynamically change its strength to adaptively facilitate the intermediate steps during the ORR process, which renders FeN 4 -Te n active sites with superior ORR activity. This adaptive behavior mimics the conformational dynamics of an enzyme during the reaction, but retains the stability nature as a heterogeneous catalyst. The experiments validate that the as-designed catalyst with a characterized FeN 4 -Te n structure outperforms the commercial Pt/C catalyst both on activity and stability.
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