Development of molecular electrocatalysts for CO2 reduction and H2 production/oxidation.

The conversion of solar energy to fuels in both natural and artificial photosynthesis requires components for both light-harvesting and catalysis. The light-harvesting component generates the electrochemical potentials required to drive fuel-generating reactions that would otherwise be thermodynamically uphill. This Account focuses on work from our laboratories on developing molecular electrocatalysts for CO(2) reduction and for hydrogen production. A true analog of natural photosynthesis will require the ability to capture CO(2) from the atmosphere and reduce it to a useful fuel. Work in our laboratories has focused on both aspects of this problem. Organic compounds such as quinones and inorganic metal complexes can serve as redox-active CO(2) carriers for concentrating CO(2). We have developed catalysts for CO(2) reduction to form CO based on a [Pd(triphosphine)(solvent)](2+) platform. Catalytic activity requires the presence of a weakly coordinating solvent molecule that can dissociate during the catalytic cycle and provide a vacant coordination site for binding water and assisting C-O bond cleavage. Structures of [NiFe] CO dehydrogenase enzymes and the results of studies on complexes containing two [Pd(triphosphine)(solvent)](2+) units suggest that participation of a second metal in CO(2) binding may also be required for achieving very active catalysts. We also describe molecular electrocatalysts for H(2) production and oxidation based on [Ni(diphosphine)(2)](2+) complexes. Similar to palladium CO(2) reduction catalysts, these species require the optimization of both first and second coordination spheres. In this case, we use structural features of the first coordination sphere to optimize the hydride acceptor ability of nickel needed to achieve heterolytic cleavage of H(2). We use the second coordination sphere to incorporate pendant bases that assist in a number of important functions including H(2) binding, H(2) cleavage, and the transfer of protons between nickel and solution. These pendant bases, or proton relays, are likely to be important in the design of catalysts for a wide range of fuel production and fuel utilization reactions involving multiple electron and proton transfer steps. The generation of fuels from abundant substrates such as CO(2) and water remains a daunting research challenge, requiring significant advances in new inexpensive materials for light harvesting and the development of fast, stable, and efficient electrocatalysts. Although we describe progress in the development of redox-active carriers capable of concentrating CO(2) and molecular electrocatalysts for CO(2) reduction, hydrogen production, and hydrogen oxidation, much more remains to be done.

[1]  D. H. Gibson,et al.  Hydride donor abilities and bond dissociation free energies of transition metal formyl complexes. , 2002, Journal of the American Chemical Society.

[2]  D. Dubois,et al.  Electrochemical Reduction of CO2 Catalyzed by a Dinuclear Palladium Complex Containing a Bridging Hexaphosphine Ligand: Evidence for Cooperativity , 1995 .

[3]  Clifford P. Kubiak,et al.  Electrocatalytic and Homogeneous Approaches to Conversion of CO2 to Liquid Fuels , 2009 .

[4]  D. Dubois,et al.  Electrochemical Reduction of CO2 to CO Catalyzed by a Bimetallic Palladium Complex , 2006 .

[5]  D. Dubois,et al.  Exclusion of Six-Coordinate Intermediates in the Electrochemical Reduction of CO2 Catalyzed by [Pd(triphosphine)(CH3CN)](BF4)2 Complexes , 1994 .

[6]  D. Dubois,et al.  [Ni(Et2PCH2NMeCH2PEt2)2]2+ as a functional model for hydrogenases. , 2003, Inorganic chemistry.

[7]  D. R. Mcalister,et al.  Reduction of coordinated carbon monoxide. Synthesis of neutral metal formyl and hydroxymethyl derivatives of the (cyclopentadienyl)dicarbonyl(nitrosyl)rhenium(1+) cation , 1980 .

[8]  Daniel L DuBois,et al.  Using ligand bite angles to control the hydricity of palladium diphosphine complexes. , 2004, Journal of the American Chemical Society.

[9]  R. Noble,et al.  Electrochemical Separation and Concentration of <1% Carbon Dioxide from Nitrogen , 2003 .

[10]  Brendan Twamley,et al.  Mechanistic insights into catalytic h(2) oxidation by ni complexes containing a diphosphine ligand with a positioned amine base. , 2009, Journal of the American Chemical Society.

[11]  Bruce C. Noll,et al.  Relative Hydride, Proton, and Hydrogen Atom Transfer Abilities of [HM(diphosphine)2]PF6 Complexes (M = Pt, Ni) , 1999 .

[12]  M. Badger,et al.  Advances in understanding the cyanobacterial CO2-concentrating-mechanism (CCM): functional components, Ci transporters, diversity, genetic regulation and prospects for engineering into plants. , 2008, Journal of experimental botany.

[13]  D. Dubois,et al.  Free-Energy Relationships between the Proton and Hydride Donor Abilities of [HNi(diphosphine)2]+ Complexes and the Half-Wave Potentials of Their Conjugate Bases , 2001 .

[14]  Calvin J. Curtis,et al.  Periodic trends in metal hydride donor thermodynamics: Measurement and comparison of the hydride donor abilities of the series HM(PNP)2+ (M = Ni, Pd, Pt; PNP = Et2PCH2N(Me)CH2PEt2) , 2004 .

[15]  Daniel L DuBois,et al.  Measurement of the hydride donor abilities of [HM(diphosphine)2]+ complexes (M = Ni, Pt) by heterolytic activation of hydrogen. , 2002, Journal of the American Chemical Society.

[16]  Daniel L DuBois,et al.  Hydrogen oxidation and production using nickel-based molecular catalysts with positioned proton relays. , 2006, Journal of the American Chemical Society.

[17]  D. Dubois,et al.  Concentration of carbon dioxide by electrochemically modulated complexation with a binuclear copper complex. , 2005, Inorganic chemistry.

[18]  D. Dubois Development of transition metal phosphine complexes as electrocatalysts for CO2 and CO reduction , 1997 .

[19]  Daniel L DuBois,et al.  Nature of hydrogen interactions with Ni(II) complexes containing cyclic phosphine ligands with pendant nitrogen bases , 2007, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[20]  Jae-Hun Jeoung,et al.  Carbon Dioxide Activation at the Ni,Fe-Cluster of Anaerobic Carbon Monoxide Dehydrogenase , 2007, Science.

[21]  D. Dubois,et al.  Generation of metal formyl complexes using nickel and platinum hydrides as reducing agents , 1993 .

[22]  Aaron D. Wilson,et al.  Hydrogen production using cobalt-based molecular catalysts containing a proton relay in the second coordination sphere , 2008 .

[23]  A. Volbeda,et al.  Structure/Function Relationships of [NiFe]- and [FeFe]-Hydrogenases , 2007 .