| Title | Promoting selective electrochemical CO2 reduction under unconventionally acidic conditions through secondary coordination sphere positioning |
| Publication Type | Journal Article |
| Year of Publication | 2025 |
| Authors | Teindl, K, Reid, JP, Nichols, EM |
| Journal | Chem. Sci. |
| Volume | 16 |
| Pagination | 19226-19234 |
| Abstract | While several studies have investigated the effects of protic secondary coordination sphere (SCS) groups on the kinetics of iron tetraphenylporphyrin (FeTPP) catalysed CO2 reduction{,} few have examined how a protic SCS might alter reaction selectivity. Under mildly acidic conditions{,} FeTPP-based catalysts are selective towards the 2e−/2H+ reduction of CO2 to CO; however{,} in the presence of more acidic proton donors{,} indiscriminate proton transfers often result in parasitic H2 evolution. This report investigates how SCS amide positioning alters CO versus H2 selectivity during CO2 reduction with a series of four FeTPP isomers bearing SCS amides at varying positions around the porphyrin core: NH donors are placed at either the meta or ortho position of the meso aryl porphyrin ring{,} as well as proximal (closer) or distal (farther away) to the porphyrin plane. In the presence of a conventional{,} weakly acidic proton source (phenol; pKa = 29.2 in MeCN){,} all isomers display the expected high faradaic efficiency (FE) towards CO (FECO = 67–85%) along with minimal H2 evolution (FEH2 = 3–13%). With a significantly stronger acid (3{,}5-bis(trifluoromethyl)phenol; pKa = 23.8 in MeCN){,} H2 becomes the major product when using the ortho-distal or both meta isomers (FEH2 = 45–65%) as well as unfunctionalized FeTPP (FEH2 = 78%). Importantly{,} the ortho-proximal isomer shows dramatically rescued CO selectivity under these unconventionally acidic conditions (FECO = 83 ± 4%). These results show how proper SCS placement impacts reaction selectivity during CO2 reduction{,} particularly with respect to minimizing indiscriminate proton transfers that lead to undesirable reactivity. |
| URL | http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/D5SC04700E |
| DOI | 10.1039/D5SC04700E |