Role of Multiple Vanadium Centers on Redox Buffering and Rates of Polyvanadomolybdate-Cu(II)-Catalyzed Aerobic Oxidations.

Inorganic chemistry(2023)

Cited 3|Views10
No score
Abstract
A recent report established that the tetrabutylammonium (TBA) salt of hexavanadopolymolybdate TBAH[PMoVO] () serves as the redox buffer with Cu(II) as a co-catalyst for aerobic deodorization of thiols in acetonitrile. Here, we document the profound impact of vanadium atom number ( = 0-4 and 6) in TBA salts of PVMoO () on this multicomponent catalytic system. The cyclic voltammetric peaks from 0 to -2000 mV vs Fc/Fc under catalytic conditions (acetonitrile, ambient T) are assigned and clarify that the redox buffering capability of the /Cu catalytic system derives from the number of steps, the number of electrons transferred each step, and the potential ranges of each step. All are reduced by varying numbers of electrons, from 1 to 6, in different reaction conditions. Significantly, with ≤ 3 not only has much lower activity than when > 3 (for example, the turnover frequencies (TOF) of and are 8.9 and 48 s, respectively) but also, unlike the latter, cannot maintain steady reduction states when the Mo atoms in these polyoxometalate (POMs) are also reduced. Stopped-flow kinetics measurements reveal that Mo atoms in Keggin exhibit much slower electron transfer rates than V atoms. There are two kinetic arguments: (a) In acetonitrile, the first formal potential of is more positive than that of (-236 and -405 mV vs Fc/Fc); however, the initial reduction rates are 1.06 × 10 s and 0.036 s for and , respectively. (b) In aqueous sulfate buffer (pH = 2), a two-step kinetics is observed for and , where the first and second steps are assigned to reduction of the V and Mo centers, respectively. Since fast and reversible electron transfers are key for the redox buffering behavior, the slower electron transfer kinetics of Mo preclude these centers functioning in redox buffering that maintains the solution potential. We conclude that with more vanadium atoms allows the POM to undergo more and faster redox changes, which enables the POM to function as a redox buffer dictating far higher catalytic activity.
More
Translated text
Key words
multiple vanadium centers,oxidations,redox buffering
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined