20 research outputs found

    Ligand Fluorination to Optimize Preferential Oxidation of Carbon Monoxide by Water-Soluble Rhodium Porphyrins

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    Catalytic, low temperature preferential oxidation (PROX) of carbon monoxide by aqueous [5,10,15,20-tetrakis- (4-sulfonatophenyl)-2,3,7,8,12,13,17,18-octafluoroporphyrinato]- rhodium(III) tetrasodium salt, (1[Rh(III)]) and [5,10,15, 20-tetrakis(3-sulfonato-2,6-difluorophenyl)-2,3,7,8,12,13, 17,18-octafluoroporphyrinato]rhodium(III) tetrasodium salt, (2[Rh(III)]) is reported. The PROX reaction occurs at ambient temperature in buffered (4 ≤ pH ≤ 13) aqueous solutions. Fluorination on the porphyrin periphery is shown to increase the CO PROX reaction rate, shift the metal centered redox potentials, and acidify ligated water molecules. Most importantly, β-fluorination increases the acidity of the rhodium hydride complex (pKa = 2.2 ± 0.2 for 2[Rh-D]); the dramatically increased acidity of the Rh(III) hydride complex precludes proton reduction and hydrogen activation near neutral pH, thereby permitting oxidation of CO to be unaffected by the presence of H2. This new fluorinated water-soluble rhodium porphyrin-based homogeneous catalyst systempermits preferential oxidation of carbonmonoxide in hydrogen gas streams at 308 K using dioxygen or a sacrificial electron acceptor (indigo carmine) as the terminal oxidant
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