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Published September 18, 2012 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Molecular mechanisms of cobalt-catalyzed hydrogen evolution

Abstract

Several cobalt complexes catalyze the evolution of hydrogen from acidic solutions, both homogeneously and at electrodes. The detailed molecular mechanisms of these transformations remain unresolved, largely owing to the fact that key reactive intermediates have eluded detection. One method of stabilizing reactive intermediates involves minimizing the overall reaction free-energy change. Here, we report a new cobalt(I) complex that reacts with tosylic acid to evolve hydrogen with a driving force of just 30 meV∕Co. Protonation of Co^I produces a transient Co^(IIII)-H complex that was characterized by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The Co^(IIII)-H intermediate decays by second-order kinetics with an inverse dependence on acid concentration. Analysis of the kinetics suggests that Co^(IIII)-H produces hydrogen by two competing pathways: a slower homolytic route involving two Co^(IIII)-H species and a dominant heterolytic channel in which a highly reactive Co^(II)-H transient is generated by Co^I reduction of Co^(IIII)-H.

Additional Information

© 2012 National Academy of Sciences. Contributed by Harry B. Gray, August 6, 2012; sent for review July 19, 2012; Published online before print September 4, 2012. We thank Lawrence M. Henling and the late Dr. Michael W. Day for crystallographic assistance, and Dr. Jay A. Labinger for insightful comments. Our work is supported by the National Science Foundation Center for Chemical Innovation in Solar Fuels (CHE-0802907); Center for Chemical Innovation postdoctoral fellowship to S.C.M. We thank Chevron-Phillips for additional support. The Bruker KAPPA APEX II X-ray diffractometer was purchased via a National Science Foundation Chemistry Research Instrumentation and Facilities: Departmental Multi-User Instrumentation (CRIF:MU) award to the California Institute of Technology, CHE-0639094. Author contributions: S.C.M. designed research; S.C.M. performed research; S.C.M. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; S.C.M., J.R.W., and H.B.G. analyzed data; and S.C.M., J.R.W., and H.B.G. wrote the paper. The authors declare no conflict of interest. Data deposition: The atomic coordinates have been deposited in the Cambridge Structural Database, Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre, Cambridge CB2 1EZ, United Kingdom http://www.ccdc.cam.ac.uk, [CSD reference numbers 838815 (1), 844589 (2), and 846384 (3)].

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Published - PNAS-2012-Marinescu-15127-31.pdf

Supplemental Material - Appendix.pdf

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August 22, 2023
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