4.8 Article

Mechanism of Catalytic O2 Reduction by Iron Tetraphenylporphyrin

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 141, Issue 20, Pages 8315-8326

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.9b02640

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Center for Molecular Electrocatalysis, an Energy Frontier Research Center - U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences
  2. U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  3. Office of Biological and Environmental Research
  4. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship
  5. NIH [F32GM130071, F32GM129890]

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The catalytic reduction of O-2 to H2O is important for energy transduction in both synthetic and natural systems. Herein, we report a kinetic and thermochemical study of the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) catalyzed by iron tetraphenylporphyrin (Fe(TPP)) in N,N'-dimethylformamide using decamethyl-ferrocene as a soluble reductant and para-toluenesulfonic acid (pTsOH) as the proton source. This work identifies and characterizes catalytic intermediates and their thermochemistry, providing a detailed mechanistic understanding of the system. Specifically, reduction of the ferric porphyrin, [Fe(III)l(TPP)](+), forms the ferrous porphyrin, Fe-II(TPP), which binds O-2 reversibly to form the ferric superoxide porphyrin complex, Fe-II(TPP)(O-2(center dot-)). The temperature dependence of both the electron transfer and O-2 binding equilibrium constants has been determined. Kinetic studies over a range of concentrations and temperatures show that the catalyst resting state changes during the course of each catalytic run, necessitating the use of global kinetic modeling to extract rate constants and kinetic barriers. The rate-determining step in oxygen reduction is the protonation of Fe-III(TPP)(O-2(center dot-)) by pTsOH, which proceeds with a substantial kinetic barrier. Computational studies indicate that this barrier for proton transfer arises from an unfavorable preassociation of the proton donor with the superoxide adduct and a transition state that requires significant desolvation of the proton donor. Together, these results are the first example of oxygen reduction by iron tetraphenylporphyrin where the pre-equilibria among ferric, ferrous, and ferric-superoxide intermediates have been quantified under catalytic conditions. This work gives a generalizable model for the mechanism of iron porphyrin-catalyzed ORR and provides an unusually complete mechanistic study of an ORR reaction. More broadly, this study also highlights the kinetic challenges for proton transfer to catalytic intermediates in organic media.

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