5 research outputs found
Breaking a Molecular Scaling Relationship Using an Iron–Iron Fused Porphyrin Electrocatalyst for Oxygen Reduction
The design of efficient electrocatalysts
is limited by scaling
relationships governing trade-offs between thermodynamic and kinetic
performance metrics. This ″iron law″
of electrocatalysis arises from synthetic design strategies, where
structural alterations to a catalyst must balance nucleophilic versus
electrophilic character. Efforts to circumvent this fundamental impasse
have focused on bioinspired applications of extended coordination
spheres and charged sites proximal to a catalytic center. Herein,
we report evidence for breaking a molecular scaling relationship involving
electrocatalysis of the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) by leveraging
ligand design. We achieve this using a binuclear catalyst (a diiron
porphyrin), featuring a macrocyclic ligand with extended electronic
conjugation. This ligand motif delocalizes electrons across the molecular
scaffold, improving the catalyst’s nucleophilic and electrophilic
character. As a result, our binuclear catalyst exhibits low overpotential
and high catalytic turnover frequency, breaking the traditional trade-off
between these two metrics
Photoelectrochemical Urea Synthesis from Nitrate and Carbon Dioxide on GaN Nanowires
Semiconductor
photoelectrodes can be used to synthesize urea from
carbon dioxide and nitrate under solar light. We find that GaN nanowires
(NWs) have inherent catalytic activity for nitrate conversion to nitrite,
while Ag cocatalysts loaded onto GaN NWs further promote the performance
of photoelectrochemical urea synthesis. Under optimized conditions,
a high faradaic efficiency of 75.6 ± 2.6% was achieved at a potential
of −0.3 vs reversible hydrogen electrode. Control experiments
and theoretical calculations suggest that the high selectivity of
urea originates from the facilitated C–N coupling between key
intermediates of NO2 and COO– at an early
stage of the reduction reaction. This work demonstrates the potential
of GaN NWs with loaded Ag cocatalysts to achieve solar-powered urea
synthesis with an efficiency higher than that of previously reported
methods
BODIPY Chemisorbed on SnO<sub>2</sub> and TiO<sub>2</sub> Surfaces for Photoelectrochemical Applications
Advancement toward dye-sensitized
photoelectrochemical
cells to
produce solar fuels by solar-driven water splitting requires a photosensitizer
that is firmly attached to the semiconducting photoelectrodes. Covalent
binding enhances the efficiency of electron injection from the photoexcited
dye into the metal oxide. Optimization of charge transfer, efficient
electron injection, and minimal electron–hole recombination
are mandatory for achieving high efficiencies. Here, a BODIPY-based
dye exploiting a novel surface-anchoring mode via boron is compared
to a similar dye bound by a traditional carboxylic acid anchoring
group. Through terahertz and transient absorption spectroscopic studies,
along with interfacial electron transfer simulations, we find that,
when compared to the traditional carboxylic acid anchoring group,
electron injection of boron-bound BODIPY is faster into both TiO2 and SnO2. Although the surface coverage is low
compared with carboxylic acids, the binding stability is improved
over a wide range of pH. Subsequent photoelectrochemical studies using
a sacrificial electron donor showed that this combined dye and anchoring
group maintained photocurrent with good stability over long-time irradiation.
This recently discovered binding mode of BODIPY shows excellent electron
injection and good stability over time, making it promising for future
investigations
BODIPY Chemisorbed on SnO<sub>2</sub> and TiO<sub>2</sub> Surfaces for Photoelectrochemical Applications
Advancement toward dye-sensitized
photoelectrochemical
cells to
produce solar fuels by solar-driven water splitting requires a photosensitizer
that is firmly attached to the semiconducting photoelectrodes. Covalent
binding enhances the efficiency of electron injection from the photoexcited
dye into the metal oxide. Optimization of charge transfer, efficient
electron injection, and minimal electron–hole recombination
are mandatory for achieving high efficiencies. Here, a BODIPY-based
dye exploiting a novel surface-anchoring mode via boron is compared
to a similar dye bound by a traditional carboxylic acid anchoring
group. Through terahertz and transient absorption spectroscopic studies,
along with interfacial electron transfer simulations, we find that,
when compared to the traditional carboxylic acid anchoring group,
electron injection of boron-bound BODIPY is faster into both TiO2 and SnO2. Although the surface coverage is low
compared with carboxylic acids, the binding stability is improved
over a wide range of pH. Subsequent photoelectrochemical studies using
a sacrificial electron donor showed that this combined dye and anchoring
group maintained photocurrent with good stability over long-time irradiation.
This recently discovered binding mode of BODIPY shows excellent electron
injection and good stability over time, making it promising for future
investigations
BODIPY Chemisorbed on SnO<sub>2</sub> and TiO<sub>2</sub> Surfaces for Photoelectrochemical Applications
Advancement toward dye-sensitized
photoelectrochemical
cells to
produce solar fuels by solar-driven water splitting requires a photosensitizer
that is firmly attached to the semiconducting photoelectrodes. Covalent
binding enhances the efficiency of electron injection from the photoexcited
dye into the metal oxide. Optimization of charge transfer, efficient
electron injection, and minimal electron–hole recombination
are mandatory for achieving high efficiencies. Here, a BODIPY-based
dye exploiting a novel surface-anchoring mode via boron is compared
to a similar dye bound by a traditional carboxylic acid anchoring
group. Through terahertz and transient absorption spectroscopic studies,
along with interfacial electron transfer simulations, we find that,
when compared to the traditional carboxylic acid anchoring group,
electron injection of boron-bound BODIPY is faster into both TiO2 and SnO2. Although the surface coverage is low
compared with carboxylic acids, the binding stability is improved
over a wide range of pH. Subsequent photoelectrochemical studies using
a sacrificial electron donor showed that this combined dye and anchoring
group maintained photocurrent with good stability over long-time irradiation.
This recently discovered binding mode of BODIPY shows excellent electron
injection and good stability over time, making it promising for future
investigations