Electrochemical Reduction of Aqueous Imidazolium on Pt(111) by Proton Coupled Electron Transfer

Recent electrochemical studies have reported aqueous CO 2 reduction to formic acid, formaldehyde and methanol at potentials of ca. −600 mV versus SCE, when using a Pt working electrode in acidic pyridine solutions. In those experiments, pyridinium is thought to function as a one-electron shuttle for...

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Veröffentlicht in:Topics in catalysis 2015-02, Vol.58 (1), p.23-29
Hauptverfasser: Liao, Kuo, Askerka, Mikhail, Zeitler, Elizabeth L., Bocarsly, Andrew B., Batista, Victor S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Recent electrochemical studies have reported aqueous CO 2 reduction to formic acid, formaldehyde and methanol at potentials of ca. −600 mV versus SCE, when using a Pt working electrode in acidic pyridine solutions. In those experiments, pyridinium is thought to function as a one-electron shuttle for the underlying multielectron reduction of CO 2 . DFT studies proposed that the critical step of the underlying reaction mechanism is the one-electron reduction of pyridinium at the Pt surface through proton coupled electron transfer. Such reaction forms a H adsorbate that is subsequently transferred to CO 2 as a hydride, through a proton coupled hydride transfer mechanism where pyridinium functions as a Brønsted acid. Here, we find that imidazolium exhibits an electrochemical behavior analogous to pyridinium, as characterized by the experimental and theoretical analysis of the initial reduction on Pt. A cathodic wave, with a cyclic voltammetric half wave potential of ca. −680 mV versus SCE, is consistent with the theoretical prediction based on the recently proposed reaction mechanism suggesting that positively charged Brønsted acids could serve as electrocatalytic one-electron shuttle species for multielectron CO 2 reduction.
ISSN:1022-5528
1572-9028
DOI:10.1007/s11244-014-0340-2