Electrocatalytic proton reduction catalysed by the low-valent tetrairon-oxo cluster [Fe4(CO)10(κ2-dppn)(μ4-O)]2− [dppn = 1,1′-bis(diphenylphosphino)naphthalene]†
Abstract
The 62-electron oxo-capped tetrairon butterfly cluster, Fe4(CO)10(κ2-dppn)(μ4-O) (1) {dppn = 1,8-bis(diphenylphosphino)naphthalene}, undergoes reversible one-electron oxidation and reduction events to generate the 61- and 63-electron radicals [Fe4(CO)10(κ2-dppn)(μ4-O)]+ (1+) and [Fe4(CO)10(κ2-dppn)(μ4-O)]− (1−) respectively. Addition of a second electron affords the 64-electron cluster [Fe4(CO)10(κ2-dppn)(μ4-O)]2− (12−) which has more limited stability but is stable within the time frame of the electrochemical experiment. While 1 and 1− are inactive as proton reduction catalysts, dianionic 12− is active for the formation of hydrogen from both CHCl2CO2H and CF3CO2H. This occurs via two separate mechanistic cycles branching at the mono-protonated species [Fe4(CO)10(κ2-dppn)(μ4-O)H]− (1H−) resulting from the rapid protonation of 12−. This intermediate then undergoes competing protonation and reduction events leading to EECC and ECEC catalytic cycles respectively with 1− being pivotal to both. In order to understand the nature of [Fe4(CO)10(κ2-dppn)(μ4-O)]2− (12−) and its protonated products density functional theory (DFT) calculations have been employed. Theoretical calculations reveal that the cluster core remains intact in 12−, but the two consecutive one-electron reductions lead to an expansion of one of the trigonal-pyramids of this trigonal-bipyramidal cluster. The two-electron reduced cluster 12− protonates at dppn-bound iron, accompanied by a wingtip-hinge iron–iron bond scission, and then reacts with a second proton to evolve hydrogen.
- This article is part of the themed collection: In memory of Professor Kenneth Wade