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Title

Outpacing conventional nicotinamide hydrogenation catalysis by a strongly communicating heterodinuclear photocatalyst.

Authors

Zedler, Linda; Wintergerst, Pascal; Mengele, Alexander K.; Müller, Carolin; Li, Chunyu; Dietzek-Ivanšić, Benjamin; Rau, Sven

Abstract

Unequivocal assignment of rate-limiting steps in supramolecular photocatalysts is of utmost importance to rationally optimize photocatalytic activity. By spectroscopic and catalytic analysis of a series of three structurally similar [(tbbpy)2Ru-BL-Rh(Cp*)Cl]3 photocatalysts just differing in the central part (alkynyl, triazole or phenazine) of the bridging ligand (BL) we are able to derive design strategies for improved photocatalytic activity of this class of compounds (tbbpy = 4,4´-tert-butyl-2,2´-bipyridine, Cp* = pentamethylcyclopentadienyl). Most importantly, not the rate of the transfer of the first electron towards the RhIII center but rather the rate at which a two-fold reduced RhI species is generated can directly be correlated with the observed photocatalytic formation of NADH from NAD . Interestingly, the complex which exhibits the fastest intramolecular electron transfer kinetics for the first electron is not the one that allows the fastest photocatalysis. With the photocatalytically most efficient alkynyl linked system, it is even possible to overcome the rate of thermal NADH formation by avoiding the rate-determining β-hydride elimination step. Moreover, for this photocatalyst loss of the alkynyl functionality under photocatalytic conditions is identified as an important deactivation pathway. Although multinuclear, supramolecular photocatalysts show promise in their ability to separate the processes required for lightdriven energy production into light absorption, charge separation and fuel production by individual parts of the molecule, mechanistic understanding of the performance limiting processes are lacking. Here the authors synthesize two new dinuclear catalysts and compare them to a benchmark through detailed spectroscopic studies, obtaining significant chemical insight.

Subjects

CATALYSIS; NICOTINAMIDE; CHARGE exchange; HYDROGENATION; LIGHT absorption; CATALYSTS; RUTHENIUM catalysts

Publication

Nature Communications, 2022, Vol 13, Issue 1, p1

ISSN

2041-1723

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1038/s41467-022-30147-4

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