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Photoinduced Water Oxidation by a Tetraruthenium Polyoxometalate Catalyst: Ion-pairing and Primary Processes with Ru(bpy)32+ Photosensitizer.

Authors :
Natali, Mirco
Orlandi, Michele
Berardi, Serena
Campagna, Sebastiano
Bonchio, Marcella
Sartorel, Andrea
Scandola, Franco
Source :
Inorganic Chemistry. 7/2/2012, Vol. 51 Issue 13, p7324-7331. 8p.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

The tetraruthenium polyoxometalate [Ru4(&mgr;-0)4(&mgr;-OH)2(H2O)4(&ggr;-SiW10O36)2]10 (1) behaves as a very efficient vrater oxidation catal in photocatalytic cycles using Ru(bpy)32+ as sensitizer and persulfate as sacrifidal oxidant. Two interrelated issues relevant to this behavior have been examined in detail: (i) the effects of ion pairing between the polyanionic catalyst and the cationic Ru(bpy)32+ sensitizer, and (ii) the kinetics of hole transfer from the oxidized sensitizer to the catalyst Complementary charge interactions in aqueous solution leads to an efficient static quenching of the Ru(bpy)32+ excited state. The quenching takes place in ion-paired species with an average 1:Ru(bpy)32+ stoichiometry of 1:4. It occurs by very fast (ca. 2 ps) electron transfer from the excited photosensitizer to the catalyst followed by fast (15--150 ps) charge recombination (reversible oxidative quenching mechanism). This process competes appreciably with the primary photoreaction of the exdted sensitizer with the sacrificiaj oxidant, even in high ionic strength media. The Ru(bpy)32+ generated by photoreaction of the CKited sensitizer with the sacrificial oxidant undergoes primary bimolecular hole scavenging by 1 at a remarkably high rate (3.6 ± 0.1 X 109 M-1 s-1), emphasizing the kinetic advantages of this molecular species over, e.g., colloidal oxide particles as water oxidation catalysts. The kinetics of the subsequent steps and final oxygen evolution process involved in the full photocatalytic cycle are not known in detail An indirect indication that all these processes are relatively fast, however, is provided by the flash photolysis experiments, where a single molecule of I is shown to undergo, in 40 ms, ca. 45 turnovers in Ru(bpy)32+ reduction. With the assumption that one molecule of oxygen released after four hole-scavenging events, this translates into a very high average turnover frequency (280 s-1) for oxygen production. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00201669
Volume :
51
Issue :
13
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Inorganic Chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
77909027
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/ic300703f