Understanding the factors governing the water oxidation reaction pathway of mononuclear and binuclear cobalt phthalocyanine catalysts.
Qing'e HuangJun ChenPeng LuanChunmei DingCan LiPublished in: Chemical science (2022)
The rational design of efficient catalysts for electrochemical water oxidation highly depends on the understanding of reaction pathways, which still remains a challenge. Herein, mononuclear and binuclear cobalt phthalocyanine (mono-CoPc and bi-CoPc) with a well-defined molecular structure are selected as model electrocatalysts to study the water oxidation mechanism. We found that bi-CoPc on a carbon support (bi-CoPc/carbon) shows an overpotential of 357 mV at 10 mA cm -2 , much lower than that of mono-CoPc/carbon (>450 mV). Kinetic analysis reveals that the rate-determining step (RDS) of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) over both electrocatalysts is a nucleophilic attack process involving a hydroxy anion (OH - ). However, the substrate nucleophilically attacked by OH - for bi-CoPc is the phthalocyanine cation-radical species (Co II -Pc-Pc˙ + -Co II -OH) that is formed from the oxidation of the phthalocyanine ring, while cobalt oxidized species (Pc-Co III -OH) is involved in mono-CoPc as evidenced by the operando UV-vis spectroelectrochemistry technique. DFT calculations show that the reaction barrier for the nucleophilic attack of OH - on Co II -Pc-Pc˙ + -Co II -OH is 1.67 eV, lower than that of mono-CoPc with Pc-Co III -OH nucleophilically attacked by OH - (1.78 eV). The good agreement between the experimental and theoretical results suggests that bi-CoPc can effectively stabilize the accumulated oxidative charges in the phthalocyanine ring, and is thus bestowed with a higher OER performance.