4.8 Article

Molecular Triad Containing a TEMPO Catalyst Grafted on Mesoporous Indium Tin Oxide as a Photoelectrocatalytic Anode for Visible Light-Driven Alcohol Oxidation

Journal

CHEMSUSCHEM
Volume 14, Issue 14, Pages 2902-2913

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/cssc.202100843

Keywords

alcohol oxidation; artificial photosynthesis; photocatalysis; photoelectrochemical cells; ruthenium

Funding

  1. Region des Pays de la Loire
  2. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation [2019.0071]

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The study focuses on the immobilization of a molecular triad (NDADI-P-Ru-TEMPO) on a mesoporous conducting indium tin oxide electrode for selective oxidation of para-methoxybenzyl alcohol. The reaction under light irradiation shows high TON and approximately 80% faradaic efficiency. Additionally, the photophysical study indicates that photoinduced electron transfer is slow and must compete with direct electron injection.
Photoelectrochemical cells based on semiconductors are among the most studied methods of artificial photosynthesis. This study concerns the immobilization, on a mesoporous conducting indium tin oxide electrode (nano-ITO), of a molecular triad (NDADI-P-Ru-TEMPO) composed of a ruthenium tris-bipyridine complex (Ru) as photosensitizer, connected at one end to 2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-1-piperidine N-oxyl (TEMPO) as alcohol oxidation catalyst and at the other end to the electron acceptor naphthalenedicarboxyanhydride dicarboximide (NDADI). Light irradiation of NDADI-P-Ru-TEMPO grafted to nano-ITO in a pH 10 carbonate buffer effects selective oxidation of para-methoxybenzyl alcohol (MeO-BA) to para-methoxybenzaldehyde with a TON of approximately 150 after 1 h of photolysis at a bias of 0.4 V vs. SCE. The faradaic efficiency is found to be of 80 +/- 5 %. The photophysical study indicates that photoinduced electron transfer from the Ru complex to NDADI is a slow process and must compete with direct electron injection into ITO to have a better performing system. This work sheds light on some of the important ways to design more efficient molecular systems for the preparation of photoelectrocatalytic cells based on catalyst-dye-acceptor arrays immobilized on conducting electrodes.

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