From Molecular Catalysts to Hybrid Electrodes: A Theoretical Guide

The industrial revolution thrived our society to great technological advancement and a shift from an agrarian to an industrial society. Besides this fact, the side effect has been the development of a society highly dependent on energy, and the main sources of energy are based on non-renewable fossi...

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. Verfasser: Juan Angel, de Gracia Triviño
Format: Dissertation
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The industrial revolution thrived our society to great technological advancement and a shift from an agrarian to an industrial society. Besides this fact, the side effect has been the development of a society highly dependent on energy, and the main sources of energy are based on non-renewable fossil fuels. This issue calls for the quest for new renewable energy sources that can address the energy dependency minimizing its side effects of it. In this quest, hydrogen is a promising source due to its high energy capacity and clean sub-products. The first chapter of this thesis will revise more in deep this environmental issues and what is needed to implement sustainable hydrogen production by water splitting. As well, as how the water source is extremely relevant, and solutions for using seawater are required to scale up hydrogen production. Also, an introduction to molecular catalysts for water oxidation based on Ru will be exposed, including a historical perspective and the state of the art at this day. The first chapter will finish with the strategies explored in this thesis to overcome the limitations of molecular catalysts in water splitting devices i.e, stability and current density. This work uses an ample set of computational tools to explore the reactivity and supramolecular properties of molecular catalysts. The second chapter will start with the treatment of molecules as electronic systems utilizing molecular quantum mechanics. Wave function formalism and density functional formalism of molecular quantum mechanics will be exposed and explained to the extent that is needed to ground the results of this thesis. The next section will introduce the treatment of molecules as atomic systems employing molecular mechanics and how we derive relevant supramolecular effects such as hydrophobicity, means of attachment to electrode surfaces, solvent, and electric field effects. Finally, this chapter will revise the Empirical Valence Bond approach to study the reactivity dependence on the molecular environment. The last chapter will go over the results of this thesis that correspond to the annexed papers at the end of this work. Starting from the characterization of the oxide relay mechanism in the highly efficient catalyst Ru(tda) where a novel function for the non-coordinating carboxylate ligand is proposed. To increase the stability of the Ru(tda) an attachment to carbon surfaces has been proposed and proved to increase significantly the stability. A study o