4.7 Article

Mechanism and selectivity of photocatalyzed CO2 reduction by a function-integrated Ru catalyst

Journal

DALTON TRANSACTIONS
Volume 51, Issue 9, Pages 3747-3759

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1dt03825g

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21873031]
  2. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFA0903500]

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The phosphine-substituted Ru(ii) polypyridyl complex RuP was shown to be an efficient photocatalyst for selective reduction of CO2 to CO. Density functional calculations revealed the reaction mechanism, showing that the Ru center had an oxidation state of +2 after two one-electron reductions and Ru-II(L2-) nucleophilically attacked CO2. Protonation to generate Ru-II-hydride for formate and H-2 production was thermodynamically favorable but kinetically less so due to the presence of a Ru2+ ion in the reduced catalyst.
The phosphine-substituted Ru(ii) polypyridyl complex, [Ru-II-(tpy)(pqn)(MeCN)](2+) (RuP), was disclosed to be an efficient photocatalyst for the reduction of CO2 to CO with excellent selectivity. In this work, density functional calculations were performed to elucidate the reaction mechanism and understand the origin of selectivity. The calculations showed that RuP was first excited to the singlet excited state, followed by intersystem crossing to produce a triplet species (Ru-3(III)(L-)-S), which was then reduced by the sacrificial electron donor BIH to generate a Ru-II(L-) intermediate. The ligand of Ru-II(L-) was further reduced to produce a Ru-II(L2-) intermediate. The redox non-innocent nature of the tpy and pqn ligands endows the Ru center with an oxidation state of +2 after two one-electron reductions. Ru-II(L2-) nucleophilically attacks CO2, in which two electrons are delivered from the ligands to CO2, affording a Ru-II-COOH species after protonation. This is followed by the protonation of the hydroxyl moiety of Ru-II-COOH, coupled with the C-O bond cleavage, resulting in the formation of Ru-II-CO. Ultimately, CO is dissociated after two one-electron reductions. Protonation of Ru-II(L2-) to generate a Ru-II-hydride, a critical intermediate for the production of formate and H-2, turns out to be kinetically less favorable, even though it is thermodynamically more favorable. This fact is due to the presence of a Ru2+ ion in the reduced catalyst, which disfavors its protonation.

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