4.8 Review

Metallophthalocyanine-based molecular materials as catalysts for electrochemical reactions

Journal

COORDINATION CHEMISTRY REVIEWS
Volume 254, Issue 23-24, Pages 2755-2791

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.ccr.2010.05.001

Keywords

Metal phthalocyanine; Cobalt; Iron; Manganese; Nickel; Electrocatalysis; Modified electrodes; Thiol; Nitric oxide; Nitrite; Hydroxylamine; Hydrazine; Oxygene; Catechlamines; Phenol; Volcano plots

Funding

  1. Fondecyt, Chile [1060030, 1100773]
  2. Proyecto Bicentenario [PDA23]
  3. PROTEA (France-South Africa) [07 F 10/SA]

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Metallophthalocyanines confined on the surface of electrodes are active catalysts for a large variety of electrochemical reactions and electrode surfaces modified by these complexes can be obtained by simple adsorption on graphite and carbon However more stable electrodes can be achieved by coating their surfaces with electropolymerized layers of the complexes that show similar activity than their monomer counterparts In all cases fundamental studies carried out with adsorbed layers of these complexes have shown that the redox potential is a very good reactivity index for predicting the catalytic activity of the complexes Volcano-shaped correlations have been found between the electrocatalytic activity (as log I at constant E) versus the Co(II)/(I) formal potential (E') of Co-macrocyclics for the oxidation of several thiols hydrazine and glucose For the electroreduction of O-2 only linear correlations between the electrocatalytic activity versus the M(III)/M(II) formal potential have been found using Cr Mn Fe and Co phthalocyanines but it is likely that these correlations are incomplete volcano correlations The volcano correlations strongly suggest that E the formal potential of the complex needs to be in a rather narrow potential window for achieving maximum activity probably corresponding to surface coverages of an M-molecule adduct equal to 0 5 and to standard free energies of adsorption of the reacting molecule on the complex active site equal to zero These results indicate that the catalytic activity of metallophthalocyanines for the oxidation of several molecules can be tuned by manipulating the E' formal potential using proper groups on the macrocyclic ligand This review emphasizes once more that metallophthalocyanines are extremely versatile materials with many applications in electrocatalysis electroanalysis just to mention a few and they provide very good models for testing then-catalytic activity for several reactions Even though the earlier applications of these complexes were focused on providing active materials for electroreduction of O-2 for making active cathodes for fuel cells the main trend in the literature nowadays is to use these complexes for making active electrodes for electrochemical sensors (C) 2010 Elsevier B V All rights reserved

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