4.8 Article

Visible light-induced reduction of carbon dioxide sensitized by a porphyrin-rhenium dyad metal complex on p-type semiconducting NiO as the reduction terminal end of an artificial photosynthetic system

Journal

JOURNAL OF CATALYSIS
Volume 310, Issue -, Pages 57-66

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcat.2013.03.025

Keywords

Photocatalysis; CO2 reduction; Visible light; Artificial photosynthesis; Zinc porphyrin; Rhenium complex; NiO

Funding

  1. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [24107003] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Visible light-induced, two-electron reduction of carbon dioxide to carbon monoxide, catalyzed by a newly synthesized metal complex dyad composed of a zinc porphyrin as a light-harvesting sensitizer and a rhenium bipyridyl complex as a catalytic moiety for the reduction, was attained for the first time on the p-type semiconductor NiO without any sacrificial electron donor. The fluorescence of the dyad adsorbed on the NiO nanoparticles (20-30 nm diameter) was efficiently quenched with a very short lifetime (29 ps) compared with the intrinsic value of 1.6 ns in DMF. The radical anion of the zinc porphyrin was actually formed upon excitation of 5,10,15,20-tetra(4-carboxy)phenylporphyrinatozinc (ZnTCPP) (5) on NiO by fast electron injection from NiO to the excited ZnTCPP with a lifetime of similar to 180 ns, corresponding to the charge recombination with the hole on NiO. An electrochemical cell composed of the dyad-adsorbed NiO particle layers on an FTO cathode and platinum as a counter electrode in CO2-saturated DMF solution showed a constant cathodic photocurrent upon visible light irradiation (lambda = 420 nm) accompanied by the formation of the two:electron-reduced product (CO). The photoreduction was further enhanced by a factor of 5.5 in a system prepared by co-adsorbing ZnTCPP (5) as a light- and electron-harvesting moiety and the dyad ZnDMCPP-Re(bpy)(NHAc) (1) as a catalytic moiety on NiO, as a promising example of the design of a CO2 photoreduction system as the reduction terminal end of an artificial photosynthetic system. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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