Electrochemically and Photochemically Induced Hydrogen Evolution Catalysis with Cobalt Tetraazamacrocycles Occurs Through Different Pathways.
Sergi GrauMauro SchillingDooshaye MoonshiramJordi Benet-BuchholzSandra LuberAntoni LlobetCarolina Gimbert-SuriñachPublished in: ChemSusChem (2020)
Cobalt complexes containing equatorial tetraazamacrocyclic ligands are active catalysts for the hydrogen evolution reaction in pure aqueous conditions. We investigated the effect of different groups directly linked to the macrocyclic ligand (-NH-, -NCH3 -, or -N(CH2 OH)-). In electrochemically induced hydrogen evolution catalysis at pH 4, the rate determining step is the protonation of the reduced CoI species that gives a cobalt hydride (CoIII -H), a key intermediate towards the H-H bond formation. In sharp contrast, under photochemical conditions using [Ru(bpy)3 ]2+ (bpy=2,2'-bipyridine) as a photosensitizer and ascorbate as sacrificial electron donor, the formation of a Co0 species that quickly protonates to give a CoII -H is proposed. In this scenario, the rate determining step is the H-H bond formation that occurs in an intermolecular fashion from the CoII -H species and a water molecule. Both mechanisms are supported by DFT calculations, which allowed us to estimate the pKa values of the CoIII -H and CoII -H species and transition states based on intramolecular and intermolecular H-H bond formation from CoII -H.
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