4.7 Article

Titanium(IV) Surface Complexes Bearing Chelating Catecholato Ligands for Enhanced Band-Gap Reduction

Journal

INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 62, Issue 2, Pages 715-729

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.2c02838

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Protonolysis reactions between dimethylamido titanium-(IV) catecholate and neopentanol or tris(tert-butoxy)silanol yielded catecholato-bridged dimers, while reactions with dimeric dimethylamido titanium(IV) (3,6-di-tert-butyl)catecholate produced monomeric complexes. The neopentoxide complex engaged in further reactions and was used for grafting onto mesoporous silica KIT-6. Comparisons were made with a sequential and an aqueous approach, which showed different surface species and band-gap reductions.
Protonolysis reactions between dimethylamido titanium-(IV) catecholate [Ti(CAT)(NMe2)2]2 and neopentanol or tris(tert-butoxy)silanol gave catecholato-bridged dimers [(Ti(CAT)-(OCH2tBu)2)(HNMe2)]2 and [Ti(CAT){OSi(OtBu)3}2(HNMe2)2]2, respectively. Analogous reactions using the dimeric dimethylamido titanium(IV) (3,6-di-tert-butyl)catecholate [Ti(CATtBu2-3,6)(NMe2)2]2 yielded the monomeric Ti(CATtBu2-3,6)(OCH2tBu)2(HNMe2)2 and Ti(CATtBu2-3,6)[OSi(OtBu)3]2(HNMe2)2. The neopentoxide complex Ti(CATtBu2-3,6)(OCH2tBu)2(HNMe2)2 engaged in further protonol-ysis reactions with Si-OH groups and was consequentially used for grafting onto mesoporous silica KIT-6. Upon immobilization, the surface complex [Ti(CATtBu2-3,6)(OCH2tBu)2(HNMe2)2] @[KIT-6] retained the bidentate chelating geometry of the catecholato ligand. This convergent grafting strategy was compared with a sequential and an aqueous approach, which gave either a mixture of bidentate chelating species with a bipodally anchored Ti(IV) center along with other physisorbed surface species or not clearly identifiable surface species. Extension of the convergent and aqueous approaches to anatase mesoporous titania (m-TiO2) enabled optical and electronic investigations of the corresponding surface species, revealing that the band-gap reduction is more pronounced for the bidentate chelating species (convergent approach) than for that obtained via the aqueous approach. The applied methods include X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy, and solid-state UV/vis spectroscopy. The energy-level alignment for the surface species from the aqueous approach, calculated from experimental data, accounts for the well-known type II excitation mechanism, whereas the findings indicate a distinct excitation mechanism for the bidentate chelating surface species of the material [Ti(CATtBu2- 3,6)(OCH2tBu)2(HNMe2)2]@[m-TiO2].

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