Water oxidation catalysis is recognized as the bottleneck for the development of efficient devices based on artificial photosynthesis, that is the light driven water splitting into hydrogen and oxygen. A recent breakthrough in this field, is the development of a molecular, fast and robust water oxidation catalyst namely a fully inorganic tetranuclear ruthenium complex with polyoxometalate ligands. The crystal structure of [Ru4(μ-O)4(μ-OH)2(H2O)4(SiW10O36)2]10-, 1, evidences the entrapment of an adamantane like, tetranuclear ruthenium(IV)-oxo core, by two decatungtosilicate units. Several spectroscopic techniques confirm the maintenance of the structure in aqueous solution. In the presence of Ce(IV) as sacrificial electron acceptor, 1 catalyzes water oxidation to oxygen, showing up to 500 turnovers and a turnover frequency of 0.125 s-1. The synergistic effect of the four ruthenium centres has a fundamental effect on such astounding performance, as confirmed by spectroscopic and computational characterization of five competent intermediates involved in the catalytic cycle, in strict analogy with the natural paradigm of the oxygen evolving centre in Photosystem II. Interestingly, 1 efficiently catalyzes water oxidation in the presence of photogenerated oxidants, as well; this fundamental feature is probably related to very fast hole scavenging of anionic 1 from cationic photogenerated oxidants, such as Ru(bpy)3 3+. Thus, 1 is an ideal candidate for the assembly of high efficient oxygenevolving anodes into nanostructured devices for artificial photosynthesis.

Water Oxidation Catalysis by Molecular Metal-Oxides

SARTOREL, ANDREA;CARRARO, MAURO;SCORRANO, GIANFRANCO;BONCHIO, MARCELLA
2012

Abstract

Water oxidation catalysis is recognized as the bottleneck for the development of efficient devices based on artificial photosynthesis, that is the light driven water splitting into hydrogen and oxygen. A recent breakthrough in this field, is the development of a molecular, fast and robust water oxidation catalyst namely a fully inorganic tetranuclear ruthenium complex with polyoxometalate ligands. The crystal structure of [Ru4(μ-O)4(μ-OH)2(H2O)4(SiW10O36)2]10-, 1, evidences the entrapment of an adamantane like, tetranuclear ruthenium(IV)-oxo core, by two decatungtosilicate units. Several spectroscopic techniques confirm the maintenance of the structure in aqueous solution. In the presence of Ce(IV) as sacrificial electron acceptor, 1 catalyzes water oxidation to oxygen, showing up to 500 turnovers and a turnover frequency of 0.125 s-1. The synergistic effect of the four ruthenium centres has a fundamental effect on such astounding performance, as confirmed by spectroscopic and computational characterization of five competent intermediates involved in the catalytic cycle, in strict analogy with the natural paradigm of the oxygen evolving centre in Photosystem II. Interestingly, 1 efficiently catalyzes water oxidation in the presence of photogenerated oxidants, as well; this fundamental feature is probably related to very fast hole scavenging of anionic 1 from cationic photogenerated oxidants, such as Ru(bpy)3 3+. Thus, 1 is an ideal candidate for the assembly of high efficient oxygenevolving anodes into nanostructured devices for artificial photosynthesis.
2012
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/2531525
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 3
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 4
social impact