Potential Induced Protonation of the Second Coordination Sphere in a Hangman-type Iron Porphyrin Complex Promotes HER: Insights via in Situ Raman Spectroelectrochemistry.

Inorganic chemistry(2023)

Cited 1|Views3
No score
Abstract
The iron-based porphyrin complex containing a bispyridine-based hanging unit termed PyXPFe was previously used as an effective catalyst for the reduction of protons to molecular hydrogen in solution. Here, the molecular compound was immobilized on a modified gold electrode surface and investigated by spectroelectrochemical methods under catalytic conditions. Immobilization of the PyXPFe was facilitated using a pyridine-based amine linker molecule grafted to the gold electrode by electrochemical amine oxidation. The linker molecule denoted in this report as Pyr-1 allows for effective coordination of the iron porphyrin compound to the modified gold surface through axial coordination of the pyridine component to the Fe center. Resonance Raman spectroelectrochemistry was performed on the immobilized catalyst in pH 7 buffer at increasing cathodic potentials. This facilitates the electrochemical hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) while concurrently allowing for the observation of the , , and porphyrin marker bands, which are sensitive to oxidation and spin state changes at the metal center. The observed changes in these bands at decreasing potential indicate that the immobilized PyXPFe exists in the formal high-spin Fe state before being reduced to the low-spin Fe state resulting from axial interaction with the linker moiety. This Fe state likely acts as the precatalyst for the HER reaction. Surfaced enhanced Raman spectroelectrochemistry was also conducted on the system as the gold electrode provides a sufficient surface enhancement effect so as to observe the bonding nature of the pyridine substituents within the second coordination sphere. As the potential is lowered cathodically, the pyridine ring breathing modes at 999 cm are shown to increase in intensity due to protonation, which reach an intensity saturated limit whereat HER is conducted. This suggests that in pH 7 buffer, the increase in cathodic potentials facilitates protonation of the pyridine-based second coordination sphere. The extent to which protonation occurs can be viewed as a function of decreasing potential due to an increase in proton flux at the immobilized catalyst which, at the required onset potential for catalysis, aids in the reduction of protons to molecular hydrogen.
More
Translated text
Key words
situ raman spectroelectrochemistry,second coordination sphere,potential induced protonation,hangman-type
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