4.8 Review

Electrochemistry of fullerene/transition metal complexes: Three decades of progress

Journal

COORDINATION CHEMISTRY REVIEWS
Volume 438, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.ccr.2020.213623

Keywords

Fullerenes; Metal complexes electrochemistry; Fullerenes coordination properties; Fullerene-transition metal macromolecular structures

Funding

  1. National Center of Science [2016/21/B/ST5/02496]
  2. National Science Foundation [CHE-1807637]

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This review focuses on the electrochemical properties of fullerene complexes of transition metals, covering their coordination properties, electrochemical activity, and stability under various conditions. The study also highlights the importance of understanding the electronic communication between redox sites in these systems for their photochemical performance and the combination of electrochemical properties of formed dyads and triads.
This review is focused on the electrochemical properties of fullerene complexes of transition metals. In the first part of the review, the coordination properties of fullerenes are briefly overviewed. Metal complexes (polypyridyl complexes of transition metals, metallocenes, metalloporphyrins) that are covalently attached to the fullerene cage through the linkers are also briefly described. The eta(2)-C-60 complexes of transition metals exhibit electrochemical activity related to the fullerene cage reduction and metal center oxidation. Upon reduction and oxidation, eta(2)-C-60 complexes of transition metals are usually unstable and the metal-fullerene bond is cleaved. More stable electrochemical behavior was reported for eta(2)-C-60 complexes of transition metal clusters. Fullerene moieties bonded into dimers through metal clusters can communicate electronically between themselves. The eta(2)-C-60 coordination is also responsible for the formation of electrochemically active fullerene coordination polymers. These macromolecular systems show electrochemical activity at negative potentials and a n-doped properties. The metal-fullerene bond in polymers is much more stable under electroreduction conditions in comparison to the eta(2)-C-60 complexes. The eta(5)-C-60 complexes with a half-sandwich or sandwich structure also exhibit electrochemical activity in negative potential range related to the ferrocene cage reduction and in positive potentials due to the metal center oxidation. In contrast to eta(2)-fullerene complexes, the eta(5)-fullerene complexes of transition metals are much more robust under electrochemical conditions. The electrochemical properties of transition metal complexes in which the metal center is coordinated to the chelating ligand covalently linked to the fullerene moiety are important for understanding the photochemical performance of these systems. The electrochemical behavior of these complexes are usually combination of electrochemical properties of formed dyads and triads. The electronic communication between redox sites in the ground state depends on the complex geometry, distance between electrochemically active centers, and the nature of the linker. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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