Mechanism of Water Oxidation Catalyzed by a Mononuclear Manganese Complex.
Ying-Ying LiKe YePer E M SiegbahnRong-Zhen LiaoPublished in: ChemSusChem (2017)
The design and synthesis of biomimetic Mn complexes to catalyze oxygen evolution is a very appealing goal because water oxidation in nature employs a Mn complex. Recently, the mononuclear Mn complex [LMnII (H2 O)2 ]2+ [1, L=Py2 N(tBu)2 , Py=pyridyl] was reported to catalyze water oxidation electrochemically at an applied potential of 1.23 V at pH 12.2 in aqueous solution. Density functional calculations were performed to elucidate the mechanism of water oxidation promoted by this catalyst. The calculations showed that 1 can lose two protons and one electron readily to produce [LMnIII (OH)2 ]+ (2), which then undergoes two sequential proton-coupled electron-transfer processes to afford [LMnV OO]+ (4). The O-O bond formation can occur through direct coupling of the two oxido ligands or through nucleophilic attack of water. These two mechanisms have similar barriers of approximately 17 kcal mol-1 . The further oxidation of 4 to generate [LMnVI OO]2+ (5), which enables O-O bond formation, has a much higher barrier. In addition, ligand degradation by C-H activation has a similar barrier to that for the O-O bond formation, and this explains the relatively low turnover number of this catalyst.
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