4.8 Article

Bio-inspired organic cobalt(II) phosphonates toward water oxidation

Journal

ENERGY & ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 526-534

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c4ee03234a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Research Foundation (NRF)
  2. Prime Minister's Office, Singapore under its Campus for Research Excellence and Technological Enterprise (CREATE) programme: the Singapore-Berkeley Research Initiative for Sustainable Energy (SinBeRISE)
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Fujian Province, China [2013J01065]

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The development of artificial photosynthesis systems that can efficiently catalyze water oxidation to generate oxygen remains one of the most important challenges in solar energy conversion to chemical energy. In photosystem II (PSII), the Mn4CaO5 cluster adopts a distorted coordination geometry and every two octahedra are linked by di-mu-oxo (edge-shared) or mono-mu-oxo (corner-shared) bridges, which is recognized as a critical structure motif for catalytic water oxidation. These structural features provide guidance on the design and synthesis of new water oxidation catalysts. Herein we synthesized a new layered organic cobalt phosphonate crystal, Co-3(O3PCH2-NC4H7-CO2)(2)center dot 4H(2)O (1) and demonstrate it as a heterogeneous catalyst for water oxidation. Its catalytic activity was compared to those of cobalt phosphonates with different structures (2-4) in terms of O-2 evolution rate and O-2 yield under the same reaction conditions. The compound with both mono-and di-m-oxo bridged octahedral cobalt displays superior catalytic activity. In contrast, the presence of only mono-m-oxo bridged cobalt in the structure results in lower O-2 yield and O-2 evolution rate. Further structural analysis reveals that the presence of a longer Co-N bond induces a distorted dissymmetry coordination geometry, and consequently facilitates water oxidation. These results provide important insight into the design of water oxidation catalysts.

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