37 research outputs found
Distance dependent charge separation and recombination in semiconductor/molecular catalyst systems for water splitting
The photoinduced reduction of three Co electrocatalysts immobilised on TiO(2) is 10(4) times faster than the reverse charge recombination. Both processes show an exponential dependence on the distance between the semiconductor and the catalytic core
A Poly(cobaloxime)/Carbon Nanotube Electrode: Freestanding Buckypaper with Polymer-Enhanced H2-Evolution Performance.
A freestanding H2-evolution electrode consisting of a copolymer-embedded cobaloxime integrated into a multiwall carbon nanotube matrix by π-π interactions is reported. This electrode is straightforward to assemble and displays high activity towards hydrogen evolution in near-neutral pH solution under inert and aerobic conditions, with a cobalt-based turnover number (TON(Co)) of up to 420. An analogous electrode with a monomeric cobaloxime showed less activity with a TON(Co) of only 80. These results suggest that, in addition to the high surface area of the porous network of the buckypaper, the polymeric scaffold provides a stabilizing environment to the catalyst, leading to further enhancement in catalytic performance. We have therefore established that the use of a multifunctional copolymeric architecture is a viable strategy to enhance the performance of molecular electrocatalysts.We acknowledge support by the Christian Doppler Research Association (Austrian Federal Ministry of Science, Research and Economy and National Foundation for Research, Technology and Development), the OMV Group, the EPSRC, the BBSRC (Grant BB/K010220/1) and the Woolf Fisher Trust in New Zealand and the Cambridge Trusts. We also thank the National EPSRC XPS User’s Service (NEXUS) at Newcastle University, UK.This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Wiley via http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.20151137
Using Molecular Design to Control the Performance of Hydrogen-Producing Polymer-Brush-Modified Photocathodes
Attachment
of difluoroborylcobaloxime catalysts to a polymer-brush-modified
GaP semiconductor allows improved hydrogen production levels and photoelectrochemical
performance under aqueous acidic conditions (pH = 4.5) as compared
to the performance of electrodes without catalyst treatment. The catalytic
assembly used in this work incorporates a boron difluoride (BF<sub>2</sub>) capping group on the glyoximate ligand of the catalyst,
a synthetic modification previously used to enhance the stability
of nonsurface-attached complexes toward acid hydrolysis and to shift
the cobalt reduction potentials of the complex to less negative, and
thus technologically more relevant, values. The pH-dependent photoresponses
of the cobaloxime- and difluoroborylcobaloxime- modified semiconductors
are shown to be consistent with those from analogous studies using
non-surface-attached cobaloxime catalysts as well as catalysts supported
on conductive electrodes. Thus, this work illustrates the potential
to control and optimize the properties of visible-light-absorbing
semiconductors using polymeric overcoating techniques coupled with
the principles of synthetic molecular design