4.6 Article

Design of robust 2,2′-bipyridine ligand linkers for the stable immobilization of molecular catalysts on silicon(111) surfaces

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 23, Issue 16, Pages 9921-9929

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1cp00545f

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Center for Chemical Innovation Solar Fuels (NSF) [CHE-1305124]
  2. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE-1144469]
  3. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Opportunities Worldwide Grant
  4. Resnick Sustainability Institute
  5. Swedish Research Council (VR)
  6. Liquid Sunlight Alliance - U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Fuels from Sunlight Hub [DE-SC0021266]
  7. Swedish Energy Agency (STEM)
  8. Swedish supercomputing facilities LUNARC
  9. NSC

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The attachment of 2,2'-bipyrdine (bpy) moieties to planar silicon surfaces was investigated, revealing that adventitious chlorine atoms in the organic linker backbone caused instability at very negative potentials. Computational studies showed that structures with fluorine substituents were more stable, while fully non-halogenated structures exhibited the highest stability. Immobilizing a hydrogen-evolving molecular catalyst on a silicon cluster showed that reductively stable linkers enabled robust attachment of catalysts with behavior similar to that in homogeneous solution.
The attachment of the 2,2 '-bipyridine (bpy) moieties to the surface of planar silicon(111) (photo)electrodes was investigated using ab initio simulations performed on a new cluster model for methyl-terminated silicon. Density functional theory (B3LYP) with implicit solvation techniques indicated that adventitious chlorine atoms, when present in the organic linker backbone, led to instability at very negative potentials of the surface-modified electrode. In prior experimental work, chlorine atoms were present as a trace surface impurity due to required surface processing chemistry, and thus could plausibly result in the observed surface instability of the linker. Free energy calculations for the Cl-atom release process with model silyl-linker constructs revealed a modest barrier (14.9 kcal mol(-1)) that decreased as the electrode potential became more negative. A small library of new bpy-derived structures has additionally been explored computationally to identify strategies that could minimize chlorine-induced linker instability. Structures with fluorine substituents are predicted to be more stable than their chlorine analogues, whereas fully non-halogenated structures are predicted to exhibit the highest stability. The behavior of a hydrogen-evolving molecular catalyst Cp*Rh(bpy) (Cp* = pentamethylcyclopentadienyl) immobilized on a silicon(111) cluster was explored theoretically to evaluate differences between the homogeneous and surface-attached behavior of this species in a tautomerization reaction observed under reductive conditions for catalytic H-2 evolution. The calculated free energy difference between the tautomers is small, hence the results suggest that use of reductively stable linkers can enable robust attachment of catalysts while maintaining chemical behavior on the electrode similar to that exhibited in homogeneous solution.

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