4.8 Article

Understanding and Breaking Scaling Relations in Single-Site Catalysis: Methane to Methanol Conversion by FeIV=O

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 975-986

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.7b03597

Keywords

density functional theory; single-site catalysis; high-throughput screening; catalyst design; minimal models; linear scaling relations; methane activation; iron-oxo

Funding

  1. Office of Naval Research [N00014-17-1-2956]
  2. National Science Foundation [CBET-1704266, ACI-1053575]
  3. MIT Energy Initiative seed grant
  4. Scientific Interface from the Burroughs Wellcome Fund

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Computational high-throughput screening is an essential tool for catalyst design, limited primarily by the efficiency with which accurate predictions can be made. In bulk heterogeneous catalysis, linear free energy relationships (LFERs) have been extensively developed to relate elementary step activation energies, and thus overall catalytic activity, back to the adsorption energies of key intermediates, dramatically reducing the computational cost of screening. The applicability of these LFERs to single-site catalysts remains unclear, owing to the directional, covalent metal ligand bonds and the broader chemical space of accessible ligand scaffolds. Through a computational screen of nearly 500 model Fe(II) complexes for CH4 hydroxylation, we observe that (1) tuning ligand field strength yields LFERs by comparably shifting energetics of the metal 3d levels that govern the stability of different intermediates and (2) distortion of the metal coordination geometry breaks these LFERs by increasing the splitting between the d(xz)/d(yz) and d(z)(1) metal states that govern reactivity. Thus, in single-site catalysts, low Bronsted-Evans-Polanyi slopes for oxo formation, which would limit peak turnover frequency achievable through ligand field tuning alone, can be overcome through structural distortions achievable in experimentally characterized compounds. Observations from this screen also motivate the placement of strong HB donors in targeted positions as a scaffold-agnostic strategy for further activity improvement. More generally, our findings motivate broader variation of coordination geometries in reactivity studies with single-site catalysts.

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