Catalyst self-assembly accelerates bimetallic light-driven electrocatalytic H 2 evolution in water

Hydrogen evolution is an important fuel-generating reaction that has been subject to mechanistic debate about the roles of monometallic and bimetallic pathways. The molecular iridium catalysts in this study undergo photoelectrochemical dihydrogen (H ) evolution via a bimolecular mechanism, providing...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature chemistry 2024-03
Hauptverfasser: Cloward, Isaac N, Liu, Tianfei, Rose, Jamie, Jurado, Tamara, Bonn, Annabell G, Chambers, Matthew B, Pitman, Catherine L, Ter Horst, Marc A, Miller, Alexander J M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Hydrogen evolution is an important fuel-generating reaction that has been subject to mechanistic debate about the roles of monometallic and bimetallic pathways. The molecular iridium catalysts in this study undergo photoelectrochemical dihydrogen (H ) evolution via a bimolecular mechanism, providing an opportunity to understand the factors that promote bimetallic H-H coupling. Covalently tethered diiridium catalysts evolve H from neutral water faster than monometallic catalysts, even at lower overpotential. The unexpected origin of this improvement is non-covalent supramolecular self-assembly into nanoscale aggregates that efficiently harvest light and form H-H bonds. Monometallic catalysts containing long-chain alkane substituents leverage the self-assembly to evolve H from neutral water at low overpotential and with rates close to the expected maximum for this light-driven water splitting reaction. Design parameters for holding multiple catalytic sites in close proximity and tuning catalyst microenvironments emerge from this work.
ISSN:1755-4349
DOI:10.1038/s41557-024-01483-3