Photochemical CO2-To-Formate/CO Conversion Catalyzed by Half-Metallocene Ir(III) Catalyst and Its Mechanistic Investigation

  • Daehan Lee
  • , Sunghan Choi
  • , Min Su Choe
  • , So Yoen Kim
  • , Kyutai Park
  • , Chul Hoon Kim
  • , Ho Jin Son
  • , Sang Ook Kang*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The catalytic efficacy of photochemical CO2 reduction by the bipyridyl (bpy) half-metallocene Ir(III) complex, [Cp*Ir(bpy)Cl]+, was evaluated in both homogeneous and heterogeneous manners. The catalyst and photosensitizer were modified in order to be commonly engaged in each system, [Cp*Ir(4,4′-Y2-bpy)Cl]+ (Cp*IrPE, Y = CH2PO(OEt)2; Cp*IrP, Y = CH2PO(OH)2) and [Ir(Câ N)2(4,4′-Y2-bpy)]+ (IrPE, Câ N = 1-phenylisoquinoline, Y = CH2PO(OEt)2; IrP, Y = CH2PO(OH)2), respectively. This modification rendered the mixed homogeneous or heterogeneous ternary hybrid system, IrPE + Cp*IrPE or IrP/TiO2/Cp*IrP, respectively, from which the catalytic performance of the half-metallocene Ir(III) was assessed. The mixed homogeneous system (IrPE + Cp*IrPE) produced formate as a major CO2 reduction product with a maximal turnover number (TON) of â 800 for 48 h. In contrast, the heterogeneous ternary hybrid (IrP/TiO2/Cp*IrP) yielded both CO and formate with 16.7 vol % TEOA additive (TONCO/formate > 560 for 100 h), reflecting the idea that two different catalytic routes for CO2 reduction exist. The mechanistic investigations along with electrochemical and photophysical studies suggest that the homogeneous catalysis involves Cp*IrIII-H intermediate for formate production, while the heterogeneous catalysis undergoes multiple electron transfer pathways involving the energy lowering of the bipyridine ligand as it is anchored onto the electron-withdrawing n-Type TiO2 support.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2430-2442
Number of pages13
JournalOrganometallics
Volume40
Issue number15
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021 Aug 9

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 American Chemical Society.

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
  • Organic Chemistry
  • Inorganic Chemistry

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