Publication | Closed Access
Consecutive Thermal H <sub>2</sub> and Light-Induced O <sub>2</sub> Evolution from Water Promoted by a Metal Complex
465
Citations
26
References
2009
Year
EngineeringInorganic PhotochemistrySynthetic PhotochemistryMetal ComplexChemistryHydrogen GenerationPhotoelectrochemistryDearomatized RutheniumChemical EngineeringPhotocatalysisRedox ChemistryThermodynamicsInorganic ChemistryPhotochemistryPhysicsMechanistic PhotochemistryPhysical ChemistryCatalysisHydrogenWater SplittingWater PromotedNatural SciencesCondensed Matter PhysicsMonomeric Aromatic RuEfficient Artificial Catalyst
Discovery of an efficient artificial catalyst for the sunlight-driven splitting of water into dioxygen and dihydrogen is a major goal of renewable energy research. We describe a solution-phase reaction scheme that leads to the stoichiometric liberation of dihydrogen and dioxygen in consecutive thermal- and light-driven steps mediated by mononuclear, well-defined ruthenium complexes. The initial reaction of water at 25 degrees C with a dearomatized ruthenium (II) [Ru(II)] pincer complex yields a monomeric aromatic Ru(II) hydrido-hydroxo complex that, on further reaction with water at 100 degrees C, releases H2 and forms a cis dihydroxo complex. Irradiation of this complex in the 320-to-420-nanometer range liberates oxygen and regenerates the starting hydrido-hydroxo Ru(II) complex, probably by elimination of hydrogen peroxide, which rapidly disproportionates. Isotopic labeling experiments with H2 17O and H2 18O show unequivocally that the process of oxygen-oxygen bond formation is intramolecular, establishing a previously elusive fundamental step toward dioxygen-generating homogeneous catalysis.
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