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Viologen-Modified Platinum Clusters Acting as an Efficient Catalyst in Photocatalytic Hydrogen Evolution
77
Citations
44
References
2006
Year
EngineeringSynthetic PhotochemistryPhoto-electrochemical CellChemistryHydrogen GenerationPhotoelectrochemistryChemical EngineeringPhotocatalysisPhotocatalytic Hydrogen EvolutionEfficient CatalystMva2+-modified Platinum ClustersMaterials ScienceHydrogen EvolutionPhotochemistryStandard Deviation SigmaMechanistic PhotochemistryCatalysisHydrogenPhotoelectrocatalysisSingle-atom CatalystCluster ChemistryCatalyst Preparation
A highly efficient photocatalytic system for hydrogen evolution with dihydronicotinamide coenzyme (NADH) as a sacrificial agent in an aqueous solution has been constructed by using water-soluble platinum clusters functionalized with methyl viologen-alkanethiol (MVA2+) and a simple electron-donor dyad, 9-mesityl-10-methylacridinium ion (Acr+-Mes), which is capable of fast photoinduced electron transfer but extremely slow back electron transfer. The mean diameter of the platinum core was determined as R(CORE) = 1.9 nm with a standard deviation sigma = 0.5 nm by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). As a result, the hydrogen-evolution rate of the photocatalytic system with MVA2+-modified platinum clusters (MVA2+-PtC) is 10 times faster than the photocatalytic system with the mixture of the same amount of MVA2+ and platinum clusters as that of MVA2+-PtC under otherwise the same experimental conditions. The radical cation of NADH has been successfully detected by laser flash photolysis experiments. The decay of the absorbance due to NAD*, produced by the deprotonation from NADH*+, coincides with the appearance of the absorption band due to Acr*-Mes. This indicates electron transfer from NAD* to Acr+-Mes to give Acr*-Mes, which undergoes the electron-transfer reduction of MVA2+-PtC, leading to the efficient hydrogen evolution.
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